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G. M. Whipple & A. A. Smith, (Successors to HENRY WHIPPLE & SON and GEORGE CREAMER,) NO. 243 ESSEX ST., SALEM, DEALERS IN Standard, Miscellaneous, Blank, Nautical, & School BOOKS,
STAPLE & FANCY STATIONERY,
Fine Fancy Goods, FRENCH and AMERICAN PAPER HANGINGS, BORDERS, FIRE-BOARD PRINTS, Etc., Etc.,
Music and Music Books, Magazines and Periodicals, English and American, promptly furnished. Blank-Books of every description, made to order. Subscription Circulating Library, terms, $5 per year.
HENRY WHIPPLE has a desk in our Store, and has for sale Charts of all parts of the world.
JULIAN A. FOGG & CO., PRACTICAL
Engrabers, Chasers, delatchmakers,
JEWELLERS,
AND DEALERS IN SILVER WARE, CLOCKS, SPECTACLES, ETC.,
937 -ESSEX STREET, SALEM, MASS. (Next door to the Horse Railroad Office.)
Diploma awarded for Engraved Work, by Mass. Char. Mechanic Asso.
Jewelry and Silver Ware, richly engraved and chased. Letter Engraving, in all its branches. Silver Door Plates neatly engraved to order. Also, Coffin Plates, Stencil Plates, Etc.
JULIAN A. FOGG. FREDERICK FOGG.
CHILSON'S PATENT ELEVATED DOUBLE OVEN COOKING RANGE.
G. CHILSON'S COOKING RANGE, BOSTON
This very superior Range, now in such general use, needs only to be seen to be appreciated for the great improvements realized in this inven- tion over any other plan of Range in the United States. It is entirely new in principle, having five claims patented for improvements not found in any other Range. Its unparalleled economy in the consumption of fuel; its quick and even-baking ovens; its patent self-regulating flues around the ovens (without the usual vexatious complication of dampers found in the common Ranges) ; its cast-iron flue-plates around the oven, preventing loss of heat in the chimney ; its superior, fine, heavy castings, and general beauty of design, and conveniences, cannot fail to commend themselves to all using Ranges.
Sizes in variety, for dwellings, hotels, &c., with or without Water- backs, for Bath-Boilers, and other washing purposes; also, HOT-AIR FIXTURES, for heating additional rooms, when desired.
No housekeeper will long use any other plan of Cooking Range, after an examination of this.
CHILSON'S NEW PARLOR STOVE,
For Parlors, Chambers, Offices, Stores, &c. This Stove keeps fire day and night, and warms the floor for a great distance around it. It has a nice arrangement for ventilating the room. An Oven and Boiler attached, when desired, for Dining- rooms. All are invited to examine this invention. For sale, Wholesale and Retail, at the Subscriber's Store,
Nos. 99 & 101 BLACKSTONE ST., BOSTON, Or.at his Foundry, in Mansfield, Mass. GARDNER CHILSON.
CHILSON'S
PATENT
CONE FURNACES.
Patented in the United States, England, and France.
A GOLD MEDAL was awarded to this Furnace at a recent Fair of the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association, and the only gold medal ever awarded to any Furnace in Massachusetts.
AILSON PATENT
COLDE
AIR
The extensive use of this superior Furnace in the United States has acquired for it a reputation too well and favorably known to need more at this time than to call the special attention of those in want of the best possible means of warming dwellings, public buildings, &c., with pure, fresh, healthful heat (free from that scorching, dry, red-hot-iron heat and coal gas so common to hot- air furnaces), to an examination of this superior invention, which represents a cluster of Cones or tapering Radiators, over a broad, flaring, shallow fire-pot. These cones, being large at the base and small at the top, secure the great and important object of retaining and holding the smoke and gases back, in contact with the burning fuel, - thus thoroughly consuming the gases, while their heat is compressed up into the cones, and made to impinge against and radiate from the tapering surfaces, - thereby securing twice the heat from a given amount of coal than can be ob- tained from any other plan known to man. This Furnace is very simple in its construction, and easily managed, and much less liable to need repairs than any other kind of furnace in use.
Also, Five Sizes of Portable Furnaces, on the same principle. The subscriber would call the special attention of those in want of Portable Furnaces to this invention, which cannot fail of giving perfect satisfaction.
Chilson's New Cooking Stove will show advantages which all must admit to be the greatest improvements yet made for a strictly first-class Stove. Sizes adapted for Dwellings, Hotels, &c., with or without Water-Backs, Extension-Tops, and Hot-Closets.
For Sale, Wholesale and Retail, at the Subscriber's Store, 99 & 101 BLACKSTONE STREET, BOSTON; OR AT HIS FOUNDRY, MANSFIELD, MASS. GARDNER CHILSON.
Bas and Steam + Pipes and Bas Fixtures. E. H. STATEN, GAS, STEAM, & WATER FITTER, 147 Essex Street, Lynde Block, Salem.
DEALER IN GAS FIXTURES,
Of every description, for lighting Stores, Dwellings, Churches, Public Buildings, &c. Old Gas Fixtures and Lamps reburnished to look as well as new. Galvanized Wrought Iron Pipes for water. Rubber Hose Man-head Gaskets; Sheet and Ring Packings for steam-work, constantly on hand.
- AGENT FOR-
George B. Foster's Carcel Gas Burner,
( Wood's Patent), the best and most economical gas burner in existence.
- SOLE AGENT FOR - W. F. SHAW'S PATENT GAS STOVES,
For heating rooms of every description and size, - par- lors, bath-rooms, sleeping-rooms, extension-rooms, where there are no chimneys, &c., &c. Halls, bedrooms, bath- rooms, and all small rooms heated by the gas drawn from the common bracket, at a less expense than by the ordinary method. The only true principle whereby all unpleasant and injurious odors are avoided. Warranted by far superior to any other invention for cooking or heating by gas ever offered to the public. Patented by the inventor, William F. Shaw, in America, England, and France.
E. H. STATEN, 147 Essex Street, Lynde Block, Salem, Ms.
MAYNARD & NOYES' WRITING INK.
MANUFACTURE ESTABLISHED 1816.
REGISTRY OF DEEDS' OFFICE, BOSTON, Jan. 10, 1859.
MESSRS. MAYNARD & NOYES : Gentlemen, - I am glad that longer use of your Writing- Ink enables me to repeat the testimony given in its favor many years ago. I have used it in this office thirty-seven years, and my oldest records are as legible and black as when first written. This rare quality for permanence renders it invaluable for State and County Records, and all mercantile purposes where it is important that the writing should remain legible and unchanged in color by the lapse of time. HENRY ALLINE, Register of Deeds.
MAYNARD & NOVES' COPYING INK.
This Ink yields a copy as distinct and perfect as the original. It also combines all the properties of our Writing-Ink, for which it can be substituted.
MAYNARD & NOYES' CARMINE INK.
This article is a beautiful red or crimson color, and surpassingly brilliant and rich. It is free from sediment, and will not mould, fade, or turn dark by exposure to the air.
The above popular Inks, together with Blue, Red, Indelible, and Stencil Ink, Chemical Writing-Fluid, Ink-Powder, &c., are for Sale by the Manufacturers,
75 & 77 WATER STREET, · BOSTON, MASS., AND BY ALL STATIONERS AND BOOKSELLERS.
DRUGS &
MEDICINES
WM. WEBB, Jr., AROTHECAR
- AND DEALER IN -
PATENT MEDICINES, PERFUMERY,
TOILET ARTICLES, & C. Physicians' Prescriptions carefully prepared, day or night.
WILLIAM H. BROWN,
GLUE MANUFACTURER,
SOUTH DANVERS, MASS.
FAMILY DYE COLORS. Patented October 13, 1863.
Black. Black for Silk.
FAST
Dark Green.
Light Green.
Dark Blue.
Magenta.
Light Blue.
Maize.
French Blue. Claret Brown.
Maroon. Orange.
Dark Brown.
Light Brown.
Snuff Brown.
Pink. Purple. Royal Purple. Salmon. Scarlet.
Cherry. Crimson.
Dark Drab.
Light Drab.
Fawn Drab.
Light Fawn Drab.
Slate. Solferino. Violet. Yellow.
For Dyeing Silk, Woollen, and Mixed Goods, Shawls, Scarfs, Dresses, Ribbons, Gloves, Bonnets, Hats, Feathers, Children's Clothing, and all kinds of Wearing Apparel.
A SAVING OF 80 PER CENT.
For 25 cents you can color as many goods as would otherwise cost five times that sum. Various shades can be produced from the same dye. The process is simple, and any one can use the DYE with perfect success. Directions, in English, French, and German, inside of each package.
HOWE & STEVENS, 260 Broadway, South Boston. For sale by druggists and dealers generally.
JESSE SMITH,
WATCHMAKER
AND DEALER IN GOLD AND SILVER LEVER AND LEPINE WATCHES, ETC .; ALSO MARINE CHRONOMETERS, BAROMETERS, THERMOMETERS, NAUTICAL ALMANACS, SPY-GLASSES, ETC., ETC. NO. 262 ESSEX ST. Chronometers adjusted and Rates ascertained by Transit Observations.
PERFECT
OLORS.
THE
1440 286
SALEM DIRECTORY, 1866,
CONTAINING THE
.
CITY RECORD, : THE
NAMES OF THE CITIZENS,
AND
A BUSINESS DIRECTORY,
1
WITH OTHER USEFUL INFORMATION.
BY SAMPSON, DAVENPORT, & CO., (FORMERLY ADAMS, SAMPSON, & CO.)
PUBLISHERS OF THE BOSTON DIRECTORY, MASSACHUSETTS REGISTER, NEW ENGLAND BUSINESS DIRECTORY, NEW YORK STATE BUSINESS DIRECTORY, ETC.
OFFICE, 47 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON.
SALEM: GEO. M. WHIPPLE & A. A. SMITH, No. 243 ESSEX STREET. PRICE, ONE DOLLAR.
COPYRIGHT SECURED.
DAKIN AND METCALF, PRINTERS, CAMBRIDGE.
SALEM PUBLIC LIBRARY, SALEM, MASG.
R Class 917.445 No. SI v.12.
Beside the main topic, this book also treats of
223
SUBJECT NO.
ON PAGE.
218
220
25
ept. 55-59
222
219
189
196
201
Hors for - ser Stat
216
rts in F .sex
202
Schools and Teachers,
197
Essex Agricultural Society, 221
221
Sons of Temperance, 219
Expresses,
182
Streets, Courts, and Places, 17
Fire Department,
196
U. S. Internal Revenue, 202
23
Ward Boundaries,
24
Insurance Companies,
207
Wharves,
22
SOUTH DANVERS DIRECTORY,
225
CHANGES IN THE SALEM DIRECTORY.
Names in Directory of 1864, .
Names erased in preparing Directory of 1866, 1,484
5.312
Names added in preparing Directory of 1866,
1,874
Names in Directory of 1866,
7,186
CENSUS OF SALEM.
1865.
1865. 1860.
WARD.
Churches.
School-houses
Houses.
Families.
Ratable Polis.
Legal Voters.
Naturalized
Inhabitants.
Inhabitants.
1,
IA
5
542
912
942
579
103
3,988
4,333
2,
6
4
581
861
969
876
56
3,753
3,777
3,
5
3
514
750
796
580
84
3,252
3,645
4.
5
4
570
811
829
582
79
3,680
4,102
5,
1
2
454
727
892
430
144
3,655
3,523
6,
0
3
413
632
725
454
83
2,869
2,872
21
21
3,074
4,703
5,153
3,501
549
21,197
22,252
SUBJECT NO.
ON PAGE.
222
.
202
',.und ig Room Imanac, '66,
202, 206
Custom House,
Societies and Companies, 210
Essex County Officers,
Halls, Buildings, &c.,
. 6,796
Voters.
FAIRBANKS' PREMIUM
STANDARD SCALES.
THE GENUINE ARTICLE. ACCURATE AND DURABLE.
TWELVE PATENTS,
Issued on these scales, ARE NOW IN FORCE, which are a guaranty that the inventive skill and enterprise of the manufacturers have not slackened with the growth of their
UNRIVALLED REPUTATION.
A Complete Variety, AS
Hay, Coal, and Railroad Scales; Platform and Counter, Butchers', Druggists', Grocers', and Confectioners' Scales; Beams, Spring Balances, Weights; with Fire-proof Safes, Patent Alarm + Money-Drawers, Ingersoll's Patent Hay and Cotton Presses, &c., &c.
FAIRBANKS, BROWN, & CO.,
118 Milk Street, Cor. Batterymarch St.,
7:51
BOSTON.
THE DIRECTORY OFFICE, No. 47 Congress Street, Boston.
ESTABLISHED IN 1846 BY GEORGE ADAMS, Carried on from 1857 to: 1866 by ADAMS, SAMPSON, & Co.,
1 NOW CONTINUED BY SAMPSON, DAVENPORT, & CO. 1
From this office the BOSTON DIRECTORY has been issued annually for nine- teen years.
THE PROVIDENCE (R. I.) DIRECTORY. ALBANY (N. Y.) DIRECTORY.
TROY (N. Y.) DIRECTORY.
Each annually for about ten years.
CHARLESTOWN DIRECTORY, ROXBURY DIRECTORY, FALL RIVER DIRECTORY, TAUNTON DIRECTORY, SALEM DIRECTORY, LYNN DIRECTORY, LAWRENCE DIRECTORY, NEWBURYPORT DIRECTORY, LOWELL DIRECTORY, MANCHESTER (N. H.) DIRECTORY,
Each biennially for from ten to fifteen years. THE NEW ENGLAND DIRECTORY, 1856, 1860, 1865. THE NEW YORK STATE DIRECTORY, 1859, 1864. THE MASSACHUSETTS REGISTER, Nearly every year since 1852. 1
THE MAINE REGISTER, and the RHODE ISLAND REGISTER.
Beside the publication of Directories, a great deal of public business of a similar character has been done through this office, some of it as follows:
CENSUS OF BOSTON, 1850, CENSUS OF BOSTON, MAY, 1855,
CENSUS OF BOSTON, JUNE, 1855, CENSUS OF BOSTON AND ROXBURY, 1865, CENSUS OF VOTERS IN BOSTON IN 1857. STATISTICS OF INDUSTRY IN BOSTON, 1850. STATISTICS OF INDUSTRY IN BOSTON AND ROXBURY, 1865.
1 The city has been canvassed twice annually, for sixteen years, for the Record of Births. An annual Census of persons liable to enrolment in the State Militia has been taken some sixteen times, and a Census of School Children thirteen times. S. D. & Co. offer for sale, besides all Directories published in the United States, various Directories from Canada, Directories of London, Liverpool, Manchester, and different Counties in England; Paris (France) Directory; Cuban Directory, etc., etc.
DIRECTORY OFFICE, SAMPSON, DAVENPORT, & CO., No. 47 Congress Street, . · ·
.
Boston.
CRAFTS & WILLIAMS, (SUCCESSORS TO J. W. HUNNEWELL & Co.,) IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Drugs, Aledicines, Jaints, Dils, Dye-Stuffs,
MANUFACTURERS' ARTICLES AND CHEMICALS. MANUFACTURERS OF VARNISHES, JAPAN, &C. Agents for Forest River, Warren and Mystic Lead Co.'s French and American Zinc. Druggists', Perfumers', and Liquor Labels in every variety.
Nos. 5 and 6 Commercial Wharf, Boston. ELIAS CRAFTS, JR.
GEO. W. WILLIAMS.
1866
ALMANAC.
1866
JANUARY.
MAY.
SEPTEMBER.
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SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH BY
A. P. LIGHTHILL, M.D.
The first sensation is usually a feeling of dryness and heat in the nose, and a frequent incli- nation to sneezing. There is an inability to breathe freely, as the nose becomes stopped up, sometimes on one side, sometimes on the other.
Soon a clear, watery, acrid discharge makes its appearance, excoriating the nostrils and edges of the lips, which become red and somewhat swollen. After a few days, the discharge becomes thick, yellowish, extremely frequent, and continues to be a marked feature of the dis- ease, and a source of much danger and the greatest annoyance. After more or less time, it becomes purulent, highly offensive, and assumes an extremely fetid odor. It is usually so profuse as to require, when confined to the nose, the frequent application of the handkerchief; or, if it drops into the throat, which is more particularly the case while the body is in a hori- zontal position, constant expectoration, and sometimes both.
Sleep is frequently disturbed by a sensation of choking, caused by the presence of the dis- charge in the throat. Owing to the heat in the head, the watery portion of the discharge often evaporates, and, assuming a condition of solidity, is deposited upon the membrane of the nose and upper part of the throat in the shape of crusts or hardened lumps. The accumulation of these incrustations produces a feeling of discomfort, and narrows the nasal passages so as to embarrass respiration. Therefore frequent efforts have to be made to remove them, either by forcibly blowing the nose, or by persistent hawking, a practice as disagreeable to the one affected as it is to those around him. After the removal, that side of the incrustation which adhered to the mucous membrane will sometimes be found bloody, a fact which explains the force required for its dislodgement. During sleep these incrustations accumulate more rap- idly, and the feeling is therefore most uncomfortable in the morning. Sometimes, all efforts to clear the throat are futile until after breakfast, or after something warm is swallowed. Some patients state that they are not successful until they have swallowed some whiskey or brandy. The discharge, which is at first without smell, assumes in the progress of the com- plaint an excessively fetid odor; the breath participates in this, and becomes occasionally so revoltingly offensive as to render the patient an object of disgust to himself as well as to others. Ulceration of the mucous membrane of the nose takes place frequently, sometimes even attacking the bones, when small particles of that substance will occasionally be found mixed with the discharge. The accumulation of the discharge, together with the thickened condition of the mucous membrane, renders respiration through the nasal passages very diffi- cult, and oftentimes impossible, necessitating respiration principally through the mouth, a method very deleterious to the general health, but more particularly so to the lungs, as will be shown hereafter. The unpleasant noise produced during sleep, known as snoring, origi- nates from the same cause. The voice loses its musical quality, and assumes a discordant, harsh, and nasal character; the sense of smell becomes. much impaired or entirely lost, and the same effect, though less frequent, is produced on the sense of taste. Occasionally, while blowing the nose, a crackling or babbling sound will be heard in the ear, and hear- ing will be found thick and stopped up, but return's suddenly with something like a snapping sound. This phenomenon is usually repeated until at one time hearing does not return, and remains permanently injured. Noises in the head, of every conceivable description, will make their appearance, and add to the distress of the sufferer, and hearing may be lost so gradually that a considerable degree of deafness may exist before the person is really aware of the fact. The eyes are apt to become weak, irritable, and disposed to water on exposure to cold and wind, or after the slightest'exertion. A pain, more or less acute, or a distressing feeling of pres- sure, is experienced over the eyes, and sometimes on the top or back of the head, and also pain in the face, closely resembling neuralgia, for which it is very often mistaken. The dis- tress in the head weakens the memory, and produces irritability and moroseness of disposition. The stomach generally suffers more or less, is weak and irritable; the appetite is capricious, and is nearly always bad in the morning. In severe cases the system becomes feeble and prostrated, and there is an aversion or inability to either physical or mental exertion. Not unfrequently Catarrh proves fatal, either by debilitating the system and wearing out the patient, or by travelling downward and producing throat affection, bronchitis, and, finally, CONSUMPTION. It may be safely asserted, that, after hereditary predisposition, Catarrh is the most frequent and important cause of this fatal complaint.
The symptoms of Catarrh vary considerably in different individuals, and the degree of their severity depends upon constitutional idiosyncrasies and various external influences. With some the complaint continues for a number of years in a mild form and without causing any of the injurious results above described, while with others all the worst effects are produced in a very short space of time, and cases, apparently most harmless, may, through imprudent exposure, additional cold, or unfavorable changes of weather, suddenly exhibit all the violence and malignity which characterizes the severest ones.
With certain individuals the disease assumes periodicity, attacking them regularly each year at certain seasons, as in the early part of spring, when the roses are in bloom, and hence the name, Rose Catarrh; or in midsummer, during haying time, when it is known as Hay Catarrh. Some can tell the exact day, and even the hour, of attack. They usually claim to be entirely relieved of the difficulty in the intervals; but we have reason to suppose that symptoms of the complaint are constantly present in some mild form or other, which are roused into activity by the odor peculiar to roses or new mown hay, with which the atmos- phere is impregnated during the seasons just mentioned. The comparative quiet enjoyed in the intervals no doubt leads to the belief that the complaint has ceased entirely.
DR. LIGHTHILL treats Catarrh, Deafness, &c., and Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Throat, and Nose, at No. 20 Boylston Street, Boston, between the hours of 9, A. M., and 3, P. M.
ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF ADVERTISERS.
WE take pleasure in referring all who consult the Directory, to the following names of our most prominent and enterprising business people. Every class of business is represented by them, and we predict that they will be prepared at all times to serve those who may favor them with their patronage, in the most satisfactory manner.
The figures opposite the names refer to the page in the Advertising Department on which their business card may be " found.
Abbott A. A. counsellor, back colored | Chamberlin C. E. commercial
Adams Peter F. carriagemaker 44 college 66
Adams, Richardson & Co. hardware 5 Chamberlain, Harris & Co. West
Agge Jacob, machine forging 42 India goods ..
Alden E. G. & Co. lard and lard oil 61
Chapman & Palfray, printers 57
Aldrich Moses, grocer 34 Allen Wm. E. provisions 32 Chilson Gardner, furnaces, ' &c. [front colored
Almy James F. & Co. dry goods
Chisholm Joseph, twine .
18
Anderson John M. glue manufr. [front cover 38
Clark & Giddings, carpenters 235
Andrews Gilman, carriage maker
Appleton Geo. B. jeweller 1
Archer A. J. & Co. dry goods 12
Archer Wm. auctioneer 2
Austin C. F. & Co. bakers
65
Battis & Brown, cigars
24
Battis John, kegs
35
Black & Co. dry goods
234
Currier & Millett, furniture 38
Blethen True G. stone cutter
50 Cutler William, pocket books 8
Bosson & Glover, boots and shoes
15
Damon S. H. clothing. .
8
17 Day Albert, carpenter 48
Braman, Shaw, & Co. furniture 65 Dowbridge Andrew Jr. fish 29
Brooks Augustus T. flour and grain 22 Brooks D. B. & Brother, books and music back colored page Brooks Nathaniel H. grocer 34
Downes M. S. pianofortes 7 Downing Thos. W. & Co. dry goods 10 Driver Stephen, boots and shoes 16
Dudley A. S. & Co. dentists
[back cover
Brown C. E. painter .
51 Dudley S. J. milliner . back cover
Brown Geo. A. & C. A. carpenters 47
Dwinnell David L. M. painter . 51 Elwell Chas. B. carpenter 46
Emerton James, drugs 7
Essex Mut. Fire Ins. Co. 207
Fairbanks, Brown, & Co. scales, 3 Fairfield Joseph, provisions 233 Farrington Geo. P. apothecary 19
Faxon & Locke, stairbuilders 49
Burbeck W. H. tailor .
2
Felt John G. painter 49
39
Butler, Davis & Merrill, stone cut- ters .
48
Flint & Goldthwait, medicines 56 Flint Simeon, mason 49
Calef John, grocer
front cover
Florence Thos. T. kegs
35
Carty James H. salve and boots
and shoes
.
19
Fogg Julian A. & Co. jewellers
front colored
7
Crafts & Williams, paints, varnishes, drugs, &c. 62
Bennett Abraham, clothing 14
Crosby & Morse, watches, jewelry, &c 53
Blaney John C. painter, &c.
Blaney William, painter
234
Bott Thomas, boots and shoes .
Brown C. & Son, provisions 33
Brown R. L. painter
50
Brown W. H. glue manf. front colored Brown Wm. P. clothing 1
Browning & Long, ladies furnishing goods 13
Buffum Chas. S. undertaker 41
Burbeck J. C. soap and candles 234
Clark James, horseshoer 45
44 Clynes F. H. billiard hall 45
Codman & Shurtleff, surgical and dental instruments . back colored
Collier John H. boot and shoe stock 16 Collins Chas. H. fish 30
Copp & Pear, upholstery goods 231
Burr Henry W. rubber goods 61
Fenollosa Manuel, pianofortes .
.
27
8
SALEM DIRECTORY.
Foley Edward, painter 51 Moore Samuel, button hole machines 6 .
Follette L. B. hoop skirts
10
Morris, restaurant
30
Foote & Horton, printers 58 Moulton J. H. express front cover 37
Foster Isaac P. grocer 34 Nelles A. C. baker Nelson J. S. grain and fruit 24
Foster & Roby, copper and brass work and ship fastenings 64
Newcomb George L. machinist .
42
Fowler Geo. & Co. slaters 53
Fuller Enoch P. carpenter 46 Nichols John, shipsmith 42
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