USA > Massachusetts > Hampden County > Springfield > Springfield MA Directory 1875 > Part 5
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Corner Main and Bliss streets. Corner Main and Howard streets. Corner Main and Union streets. Corner Main and Wilcox streets. Corner Main and William streets. Corner Main and Margaret streets. Corner Main and Fremont streets. Corner Main and Gardner streets.
Corner Main and Broad streets.
Corner Main and York streets. Broad street near skate factory. Corner Willow street and Hubbard ave. Corner Willow and Park streets. Corner Willow and Stockbridge streets. Corner Spring and Worthington streets. Corner Spring and Pearl streets.
Corner Spring and Frost streets.
Corner Worthington and Summer streets.
Corner Worthington and Alert streets.
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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY.
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Corner State and Market streets. Charles street, at R. F. Hawkins' foundry (private).
Two corner State and Dwight streets. Corner State and Chestnut streets. Corner State and Maple streets. State street opposite High School-house. State street opposite Elliott street. Corner State and Elliott streets. Corner State and Spring streets. Corner School and Union streets. Corner Maple and High streets. Corner Maple and Union streets. Corner Maple and Mulberry streets. Elliott, between State and Salem streets. Corner Elliott and Salem streets. Corner State and Spring streets. State street opposite Olivet church. Corner Spring and Salem streets. Corner Park and Willow streets. Court street, near old Court House. Bridge street corner Cook's avenue. Corner Sanford and Market streets. Corner State and Willow streets. Corner State and Main streets. Corner Harrison avenue and Main street. Corner State and Walnut streets. State street opposite Federal Square. Corner State street and St. James ave. Corner State and Pleasant streets. Corner State and Hancock streets. Winchester Park.
Walnut street opposite High street. Junction of Walnut and Oak streets. Corner Walnut street and Pendleton ave. Corner Walnut and Cedar streets. Corner Cedar and Pine streets.
Reservoirs.
Besides other resources of water, there are connected with the pipes of the City water works, twenty-five reservoirs, and the location and capacity of these are as follows :
Union street, west of Main ; will supply one steamer.
Howard street, corner of Main ; will sup- ply one steamer.
Corner of Main and State streets; will supply three steamers.
Stockbridge street, near Main; will sup- ply two steamers
Main street, front of Court Square; will supply three steamers.
Harrison avenue, corner of Main street; will supply two steamers.
Bridge street, corner of Main; will sup- ply two steamers.
Bridge street, corner of Water ; will sup- ply two steamers.
Hampden street, corner of Main; will supply two steamers.
Taylor street, opposite Wason's forge shop; will supply two steamers.
Lyman street, near corner of Dwight; will supply three steamers.
Corner Main and Ferry streets ; will sup- ply three steamers.
Liberty street, near north branch of Town Brook ; will supply one steamer.
Main street, near Franklin ; will supply two steamers.
Main street, near Auburn; will supply three steamers.
Chestnut street, corner of Pearl, will sup- ply one steamer.
State street, near Elliott, will supply one steamer.
School street, corner of High; will sup- ply one steamer.
Elm street, front of First church ; will supply one steamer.
Maple street, near Cross ; will supply one steamer.
Pynchon street ; will supply one steamer. Union street, corner of Maple ; will sup- ply one steamer.
Liberty street, corner of Chestnut; will supply two steamers.
Water street, opposite Walker ; will sup- ply three steamers.
Maple street, corner of Central.
The following reservoirs are filled with surface water :
State street, opposite residence of R. F. Hawkins.
State street, near corner of Armory street. Two on State street, opposite Federal square.
One in Federal square.
Corner Federal and Grant streets. State street, near corner of Oak (well). State street, near corner of Orleans (well). State street, opposite Stebbins street (well).
Corner Bay and Florida streets. Corner Hancock and Union streets. Corner Oak and Union streets.
Union street, opposite residence of C. R. Chaffee.
Corner Walnut and Oak streets.
Corner Walnut and James streets. Corner Walnut and Hancock streets.
Corner Ashley and Cedar streets.
Corner Central and Pine streets. Corner Pine and Maple streets. Corner Central street and Foster court. Corner Florence and Spruce streets.
Other resources for water in the city are : Connecticut river, foot of Elm, State and York streets ; Mill river, at various places ; hydrants at United States Water Shops (private) ; Chicopee river, at various places ; hydrants at Indian Orchard Mills (private) ; two reservoirs and Cory brook, at Indian Orchard, Ward Eight.
Fire Alarm Telegraph.
HOW TO GIVE ALARM FOR FIRE-Un- lock the nearest box, pull down the hook once to the bottom of the slot, and let go. This gives the desired alarm all over the city, repeating the number of the box five times. Remain by the box a moment after giving the alarm, and if no clicking is heard in the box, pull again; if you still hear no clicking, go to the next nearest box and give the alarm from that. Be sure the box is locked before leaving it. The box is of iron, and double, and the inner one is inac- cessible, except to those in charge of the telegraph, and the Chief Engineer. One single stroke of the City Hall bell and en- gine-house gong is not given for an alarm of fire. Alarms will be sounded on the fire bells thus : For box 5, five strokes, 1-1-1-1-1, with short intervals, and repeating. For box 32, three strokes, 1-1-1, a pause, then two strokes, 1-1, a pause, and repeating. Alarms for other numbers are given in like manner. After an alarm from a box the police strike twenty-five or thirty blows on the City Hall bell as a general alarm.
When Steamer No. 3 is wanted at a fire in the vicinity of a box to which the com- pany does not respond, three blows will be struck on the fire alarm. When Steamer No. 4 is wanted, four blows will be given. When ten blows are struck on the telegraph after an alarm of fire, the entire fire depart- ment of the city and the Government Steam- er Waterspout will report at the fire without further notice.
CAUTION .- Never pull the hook while the bell or gong in the box is striking. Never touch the hook except to give an alarm ot fire. Never signal for a fire at a distance, nor for a chimney. Inform yourself of the location of boxes and keys near you. Keys are in possession of responsible citizens near each box, and the police and Board of En- gineers, of the Fire Department.
Location of Signal Boxes.
No. 2-Corner Main and Pynchon streets ; key at Draper's drug store, Haynes' hotel, and at No. 1 engine-house.
No. 3-At Boston and Albany railroad passenger depot ; key at Massasoit house, and with watchman at depot.
No. 4-Corner Main and Franklin streets ; key at Samuel Green's, 107 Main street, and A. B. Manley's, 30 Emery street.
No. 5-Corner Main and Carew streets ; key at house of A. Bly, 7 Sargeant street, and at Houghton & Fisk's store.
No. 6-Corner Chestnut and Carew sts. ; key at houses of Horace Wheeler, Rev. Mr. Cooley, and F. S. Graves, Chestnut street.
No. 7-Corner Chestnut and Liberty streets; key at Jerry Moore's and office of Day & Jobson.
No. 12-Corner Union and School streets ; key at house of B. F. Bowles, corner Union and School streets.
No. 13-Corner State and Byers streets ; key at U. S. Armory guard-house, and W. E. Montague's.
No. 14-Corner Worthington and Spring streets ; key at Harvey Lyman's store.
No. 15-Corner State and Walnut streets ; key at Sexton's livery office, and at Allen's market, Walnut street.
No. 16-Corner Oak and Swan streets ; key at S. B. Hubbard's and H. C. Martin's residences, Oak street.
No. 17-Corner State and Hancock sts .; key at H. W. Ellis's and E. D. Stock's resi- dences, State street.
No. 21-Corner Main and State streets ; key at Webber's drug store, and at Homer Foot & Co's store.
No. 23-Corner Main and Central streets ; key at M. Hancock's house, 1 Central street, and Keefe & Burdett's.
No. 24-Corner Maple street and Avon place; key at H. N. Tinkham's and Charles O. Chapin's residences.
5
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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY.
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No. 25-Corner Pine and Central streets ; key at Rice's store and William T. Orchard's house, Pine street.
No. 26-Corner Maple and Mill streets; key at K. Dorne's house, and at Fred Miller's.
No. 27-Corner Main and Mill streets ; key at John Hart's, C. A. Call's store, and at office of Alden's mill.
No. 31-Corner Walnut and Cedar streets ; key at Bumstead's store and J. F. Hancock's house, Walnut street.
No. 32-Lincoln Hall, Water Shops; key at Pinney's store and U. S. guard-house.
No. 34-Corner Gardner and Water sts. ; key at Walker & Co's shop, and at the resi- dence of J. C. Terry.
No. 36-Corner Water and Howard sts .; key at Newell Brothers' shop.
No. 41 - South-west corner Main and Bridge streets ; key at Norton, McKnight & Hawley's store, D. B. Montague's store, and at The Daily Union office.
No. 42-North corner of North Main and Hooker streets; key at street railway sta- tion.
No. 43-South corner of Wason street and C. R. R. track; key at office of the Wason Manufacturing Company.
No. 123- Stockbridge street; key at Smith & Wesson's.
Fire and Building Districts.
That part of the city embraced between Union street and Ferry and Cypress streets, and between the Connecticut river and Maple and Chestnut streets, and also one hundred and fifty feet each side of Main street, from Union south to Fremont and Central, and from Ferry and Cypress north to Bradford and Carew streets, is declared by law a fire district, within which wooden buildings are not allowed to be erected. The same portion of the city is also declared to be a building district, and the Chief En- gineer of the Fire Department is appointed Building Commissioner, and receives a sal- ary of $100 a year for service in that ca- pacity. Within this district, according to the law, no building shall be erected till the plans and specifications thereof, so far as they indicate the material, hight and thick- ness of the walls, and the material of the
roof and cornices and other projections, shall have been approved by a commissioner appointed for that purpose. Whoever shall commence or authorize the erection of any building within said fire limits without first having obtained the approval of the plans and specifications thereof by the said Build- ing Commissioner, in accordance with the provisions of this Ordinance, shall forfeit and pay a penalty of Twenty Dollars for each offense ; and it shall be the duty of the Mayor, whenever notified of any violation of this Ordinance, to take measures to pre- vent, by injunction or otherwise, the erec- tion of any such building.
Voting Places.
WARD ONE-Hooker school-house. WARD Two-Basement of City Hall. WARD THREE-Union Hall. WARD FOUR-Jail Office.
WARD FIVE-School-house on Union st. WARD SIX-York street school-house.
WARD SEVEN - Central street school- house.
WARD EIGHT-School-house at Sixteen Acres, and the [school-house on the corner of Myrtle and Berkshire streets, Indian Orchard, alternately.
County Officers.
JUDGE OF PROBATE AND INSOLVENCY- William S. Shurtleff; salary, $1,800. Office in Court House.
REGISTER OF PROBATE AND INSOLVENCY -Samuel B. Spooner of Springfield ; sal- ary, $1,600. Office in Court House.
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATORS - For settle- ment of estate when no heirs appear, and no will is found-Joseph Ingraham of Spring- field, James G. Allen of Palmer, A. T. Fol- som of Springfield.
CLERK OF COURTS-Robert O. Morris of Springfield ; salary, $2,000. Office in Court House.
REGISTER OF DEEDS-James E. Russell of Springfield ; paid by fees. Office in Court House.
COUNTY TREASURER-M. Wells Bridge ; salary, $1,500. Office in Court House.
OVERSEERS OF HOUSE OF CORRECTION -E. B. Maynard of Springfield, Joseph M.
Ely of Westfield, and James S. Loomis of Palmer; salaries, $100 each.
SHERIFF-Addison M. Bradley of Spring- field; salary $1,250.
JAILOR-A. M. Bradley of Springfield ; salary, $1,000.
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE-including Jus- tices of the Peace and Quorum designated by a *, and Justices throughout the Commonwealth by a t-Henry Alexander, Jr., Lucius C. Allin, William K. Baker, Richard Beebe, F. W. Anderson, tHenry W. Bosworth, Milton Bradley, M. Wells Bridge, *Ephraim W. Bond, Timothy M. Brown, Joseph W. Brown, Augustine Burt, Roderick Burt, T. D. Beach, Harvey Butler, Elisha P. Bar- tholomew, William G. Chamberlain, Ches- ter W. Chapin, Harvey Chapin, C. L. Covell, Thomas Chubbuck, Samuel J. Chapman, John W. Converse, A. M. Cope- land, Frank E. Carpenter, E. Dudley Cha- pin, Benjamin Davis (Indian Orchard), E. W. Dickinson, Hugh Donnelly, I. P. Dick- inson, Joseph H. Damon, Calvin J. Eaton, Edmund Freeman, Horatio R. Fletcher, Al- bert T. Folsom, M. T. Foley, Joseph B. Gardiner, Homer G. Gilmore, William S. Greene, Sanford J. Hall, Joseph W. Holmes, Charles P. Hill, *Charles Howard, Nathan- iel Howard, John W. Hunt, John A. Hall, James Kirkham, *Joseph Ingraham, Charles R. Ladd, Horace C. Lee, Henry S. Lee, N. A. Leonard, Charles S. Long, Charles Marsh, Elisha B. Maynard, James E. McIn- tire, William E. Montague, R. S. Moore, Edward Morris, *Henry Morris, R. O. Mor- ris, *James H. Morton, Harvey E. Moseley, Daniel J. Marsh, William Patton, *Smith R. Phillips, Samuel W. Porter, Joseph C. Pynchon, Marcellus Pinney, L. J. Powers, Henry A. Pierce, *Chas. W. Rice, William B. Rogers, James E. Russell, Charles L. Shaw, *William S. Shurtleff, Heman Smith, *Wm. L. Smith, t A. L. Soule, Samuel B. Spooner, John M. Stebbins, *James M. Thompson, Andrew Titus, *Eliphalet Trask, Gideon Wells, S. C. Warriner, John P. Wall, Frederick Weise, Theodore M. Zinsser, Daniel E. Webster.
DEPUTY SHERIFFS - Blandford, F. C. Knox; Chicopee, Nathaniel Cutler; Chico- pee Falls, Frank H. Morton; Chester, Charles Fay ; Granville Corners, L. B. Dickinson ; West Granville, Rufus Smith ; Holyoke, T. H. Wellington, W. G. Ham ;
Ludlow, D. L. Fuller, George A. Birnie ; Palmer, George W. Randall; Thorndike, George Moores; Three Rivers, George W. Randall ; Springfield, S. S. Bumstead, Wil- liam H. H. Blair, J. D. Parks; Indian Or- chard, Henry C. Fuller ; Tolland, George W. Granger, Westfield, T. M. Cooley, J. H. Willard ; West Springfield, W. C. Hatch ; South Wilbraham, Moses H. Warren. Fees, for service of warrant, 50 cents and mileage ; for special service and attach- ment of property, $1 for each defendant.
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS - William M. Lewis of Blandford, Lawson Sibley of Springfield, John O'Donnell of Holyoke ; Special Commissioners, S. C. Spellman of Wilbraham, Roland Parks of Russell. Sal- ary for all, $1,700, apportioned according to service and miles of travel. Times of meet- ing-at Springfield on the second Tuesday of April, and the first Tuesday of October and fourth Tuesdays of June and Decem- ber.
COMMISSIONERS TO QUALIFY CIVIL OF- FICERS-Springfield, William S. Shurtleff, Samuel B. Spooner, Robert O. Morris, James E. Russell.
CORONERS-Springfield, Eliphalet Trask, Joseph Ingraham, William E. Montague, Tim Henry, Dr. John Hooker, Dr. William B. Miller; Special Coroner, W. A. Birnie. Fees, when inquest is held, $5 for the first day and $4 for each day after. If sum- moned, but no inquest is held, $4; and jurymen receive $1.25 each for attendance and 5 cents per mile for travel.
NOTARIES PUBLIC-E. W. Bond, A. L. Soule, J. M. Stebbins, J. H. Morton, J. M. Thompson, Charles Marsh, Horace C. Lee, Henry S. Lee, James A. Rumrill, Frederick H. Harris, Edward H. Lathrop, J. E. McIn- tire, William S. Greene, Edward Morris, T. Alden Curtis, Stephen E. Seymour, John M. Stebbins, Edward R. Stickney, H. M. Phillips, Smith R. Phillips, P. S. Bailey, William B. Rogers, Henry H. Bowman, William P. Alexander, T. M. Brown, T. Warner, Jr., Theo. M. Zinsser.
BAIL COMMISSIONERS-C. C. Spellman and R. O. Morris.
UNITED STATES COMMISSIONER-Wil- liam L. Smith.
COMMISSIONERS resident in Springfield ap- pointed to take testimony to be used, and acknowl- edgments of deeds to be recorded in the following
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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY.
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named States-Maine, James H. Morton ; New York, E. W. Bond, A. L. Soule, Wil- liam S. Shurtleff, S. R. Phillips ; Rhode Island, James H. Morton ; South Carolina, James H. Morton ; Connecticut, S. R. Phil- lips ; Oregon, S. R. Phillips.
REGISTER OF BANKRUPTCY, Tenth Con- gressional District-Gideon Wells.
SENATORS-Hampden County, First Dis- trict, Henry S. Hyde of Springfield. This district comprises Brimfield, Holland, Mon- son, Palmer, Springfield, Wales and Wil- braham; 6,306 voters (census of 1865.) Second District, Henry Fuller of Westfield. This district is made up of Agawam, Bland- ford, Chester, Chicopee, Granville, Holyoke, Longmeadow, Ludlow, Montgomery, Rus- sell, Southwick, Tolland, Westfield and West Springfield ; 6,024 voters (census of 1865 )
REPRESENTATIVES - Hampden County, First District, Monson, Brimfield, Holland and Wales; 1,102 voters (census of 1865,) Daniel G. Green of Monson. Second Dis- trict, Palmer and Wilbraham ; 966 voters (census of 1865,) Charles L. Gardner of Palmer. Third District, first, second and third wards of Springfield; 2,099 voters (census of 1865,) Charles L. Shaw and T. D. Beach of Springfield. Fourth District, fourth and sixth wards of Springfield ; 858 voters, (census of 1865,) James Abbe of Springfield. Fifth District, fifth, seventh and eighth wards of Springfield; 1,281 voters (census of 1865,) A. M. Copeland of Springfield. Sixth District, Holyoke, Chic- opee and Ludlow ; 2,105 voters, (census of 1865,) Jacob W. Davis of Holyoke; S. A. Jacobs of Chicopee. Seventh District, Gran- ville, Southwick, Agawam, West Springfield and Longmeadow ; 1,676 voters, (census of 1865,) Emerson Geer of West Springfield ; Samuel Flower of Agawam. Eighth Dis- trict, Westfield; 1,326 voters, (census of 1865,) Reuben Noble of Westfield. Ninth District, Chester, Blandford, Montgomery, Russell and Tolland ; 917 voters, (census of 1865,) Edward E. Gibbs of Russell.
COUNCILOR-Eighth District, E. H. Brews- ter of Worthington. This district includes five Senate districts, viz. : first and second Hampden, Hampshire, Hampshire and Berk- shire, and Berkshire.
MEMBER OF CONGRESS-Tenth District, consisting of the counties of Hampden and Berkshire, Chester W. Chapin of Springfield. |
U. S. Internal Revenue.
The Tenth Collection District of Massa- chusetts includes Hampden and Berkshire Counties. Probably three-fourths of the rev- enue received is from the city of Springfield and the towns of Westfield and Agawam.
COLLECTOR-Edward R. Tinker of North Adams.
DEPUTY COLLECTOR-William P. Alex- ander, Springfield. Office at the Second National Bank, 405 Main street.
GAUGERS-Byron Porter and E. M. Coats. Office at Second National Bank.
STOREKEEPERS-Isaac N. Weston, An- drew Campbell, 2d.
State Government.
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT - Governor, William Gaston, of Boston; salary, $5,000. Councilors, First District, Joseph K. Baker of Dennis ; Second District, Seth Turner of Randolph ; Third District, Alden Leland of Holliston; Fourth District, Edward H. Dunn of Boston; Fifth District, Robert Couch of Newburyport; Sixth District, George O. Barstow of Somerville ; Seventh District, George Whitney of Royalston ; Eighth District, E. H. Brewster of Worth- ington ; salary, each, $5 per day for actual service and mileage. Secretary of the Com- monwealth, Oliver Warner of Northampton ; salary, $2,500. Treasurer and Receiver- General and Tax Commissioner, Charles Adams, Jr., of North Brookfield; salary, $3,500. Auditor, Charles Endicott of Can- ton ; salary, $2,500; Attorney-General, Charles R. Train of Boston ; salary, $3,500. U. S. Senators, Henry L. Dawes, George S. Boutwell.
Courts.
CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES -Holden in the U. S. Court House, 140 Tremont street, Boston, May 15 and Octo- ber 15. Associate Justice U. S. Supreme Court, Nathan Clifford. Judge of U. S. Circuit Court, George F. Shepley. District Judge, John Lowell. District Attorney, George P. Sanger. Clerk, John G. Stetson. U. S. Marshal of the District of Massachu- setts, Roland G. Usher. Commissioners, Charles L. Woodbury, Elias Merwin, C. P. Curtis, C. W. Loring, Henry L. Hallett, William S. Dexter, Charles W. Tuttle,
Winslow Warren, Jr., Edwin H. Abbott, Fisher Ames, and John G. Stetson, Boston ; . George Marston and Charles W. Clifford of New Bedford; William L. Smith, Spring- field ; Wendell T. Davis, Greenfield; E. M. Wood, Pittsfield; J. H. Hill, Worcester; William Howland of Lynn.
DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES -Holden in the U. S. Court House, 140 Tremont street, Boston, third Tuesday in March, fourth Tuesday in June, second Tuesday in September, and first Tuesday in December. Special courts held every Friday afternoon. District Judge, John Lowell. Clerk, Edward Dexter.
SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT-Holds a law term in Springfield, fourth Monday in Sep- tember; nisi prius term, fourth Tuesday in April. Chief Justice, Horace Gray ; salary, $6,500. Associate Justices, John Wells of Chicopee, James D. Colt of Pittsfield, Seth Ames of Boston, Marcus Morton of Ando- ver, Charles Devens, Jr., of Worcester, William C. Endicott of Salem; salary, $6,000 each.
SUPERIOR COURT-Civil terms holden in Springfield, second Monday in March and June, and fourth Monday in October; crim- inal terms, third Monday in May and first Monday in December. Chief Justice, Lin- coln F. Brigham of Salem; salary, $5,300. Associate Justices, Julius Rockwell of Len- ox, Otis P. Lord of Salem, Ezra Wilkinson of Dedham, John P. Putnam of Boston, Francis H. Dewey of Worcester, Robert C. Pitman of New Bedford, John W. Bacon of Natick, William Allen of Northampton, P. Emery Aldrich of Worcester ; salary, $5,000 each. E. H. Lathrop of Springfield, Dis- triet Attorney for Hampshire and Berkshire Counties ; salary, $2,000.
COURTS OF PROBATE AND INSOLVENCY- Judge, William S. Shurtleff, office in Court House. Register, Samuel B. Spooner ; sal- ary, $1,600.
Probate Court is holden at Springfield on the first Tuesdays of every month except August and November ; at Westfield on the third Tuesdays of February, May, Septem- ber and December; at Palmer on the sec- ond Tuesdays of February, May and Sep- tember, and fourth Tuesday of November.
The Court of Insolvency is held at the discretion of the Judge, according to the re- quirements of business to come before it.
POLICE COURT-Justice, James H. Mor- ton ; salary, $2,400. Special Justices, A. M. Copeland, Samuel B. Spooner. Clerk, Charles C. Spellman, salary, $1,200. Court held daily (Sunday excepted) at 9 A. M. in the Court House.
United States Government.
THE EXECUTIVE-President, Ulysses S. Grant of Illinois; salary, $50,000. Vice- President, Henry Wilson of Massachusetts ; salary, $10,000.
THE CABINET-Secretary of State, Ham- ilton Fish of New York; salary, $10,000. Secretary of the Treasury, B. H. Bristow of Kentucky ; salary, $10,000. Secretary of War, William W. Belknap of Iowa ; salary, $10,000. Secretary of the Navy, George M. Robeson of New Jersey ; salary, $10,000. Secretary of the Interior, Colum- bus Delano of Ohio; salary, $10,000. At- torney-General, Edwards Pierrepont of New York; salary, $10,000. Postmaster-Gen- eral, Marshal Jewell of Connecticut; salary, $10,000.
U. S. SUPREME COURT-Chief Justice, Morrison R. Waite of Ohio ; salary, $10,500. Associate Justices, Nathan Clifford of Maine, Samuel Nelson of New York, Joseph P. Bradley of New Jersey, William M. Strong of Pennsylvania, David Davis of Illinois, Noah H. Swayne of Ohio, Samuel F. Miller of Iowa, Stephen J. Field of California ; salary, $10,000 each.
Court meets first Monday in December at Washington.
Foreign Coins.
France and (Sous,
$0.0093
Belgium,
Franc,
0.167
Louis, or Napoleon,
3.62
Hard Dollar,
0.93
[ Doubloon,
14.44
( Crusada Nova,
0.50
Half Joe,
7.89
[ Stuyver, .
0.019
[ Guilder, or Flo,
0.37
( Florin,
0.33
Austria, .
Ducat,
.
.
(Sovereign,
.
.
& Thaler,
0.43
Prussia, .
Frederic d'or,
3.72
Hamburg,
Ducat,
2.11
( Frederic d'or, (Pound,
3.72
England,
Shilling, . (Penny,
( Common Rupee,
. 0.407
East Indies,
Common Mohur,
.
6.44
Silver Rouble,
.
0.68%
Russia,
( Half Imperial,
3.83
.
.
.
4.84
. 0.22
. 0.019
0.50
( Sweidrittel,
.
2 11
6.11
Spain, . .
Portugal,
Holland,
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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY.
Springfield in Detail.
Banks.
AGAWAM NATIONAL BANK-New gran- ite block, 237 Main street, corner Lyman street-Capital, $500,000. President, Henry S. Hyde ; vice-president, T. M. Brown ; cashier, Frederick S. Bailey ; teller, Sam- uel S. Bailey ; discount clerk, W. M. Wil- lard ; book-keeper, A. M. Gleason ; assistant book-keeper, John C. Griswold; clerk, Ed- ward Pynchon; directors, Marvin Chapin, John H. Southworth, Jared Beebe, T. M. Brown, Peter S. Bailey, L. J. Powers, H. S. Hyde, Charles O. Chapin, Wm. Whiting.
CHAPIN BANKING AND TRUST CO .- South corner of Main and Lyman streets- Capital, $500,000. President, C. W. Cha- pin ; vice-president, William K. Baker; secretary and cashier, James D. Safford ; teller, William F. Callender ; book-keeper, C. M. Shedd ; clerk, Henry Skinner ; direc- tors, C. W. Chapin, W. K. Baker, D. L. Harris, C. O. Russell, John B. Stebbins, Ethan S. Chapin, J. M. Thompson, H. S. Lee, J. A. Rumrill, George C. Fisk, B. F. Bowles.
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