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■ 720 PAGES '&' INDEX • || CLOTH . PRICE ONE DOLLAR
450 ILLUSTRATIONS- P A P E R • PRICE 50 CENTS-
A SOUVENIR COMPANION TO
^KING'S HANDBOOK OF NEW VORK CITvy'*^
A SUPERB VOLUME or 1008 PAGES -1029 ILLUSTRATIONS
-^mm^
■iP
PUBLISHED By.
MOSES
KING
^H
Mm^
BOSTON-MASS-
|-| arvey Fisk & Sons
No. 24 NASSAU ST., NEW YORK
DEALERS IN
United States Bonds
AND
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Municipal Securities
All securities listed on the New York, Boston and
Philadelphia Stock Exchanges bought
and sold on commission.
No marginal accounts received.
BOSTON; No. 75 STATE STREET.
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>M^»«l'«»tl'^i»' «• .^»' (t-^^ f • -^to- t i -^v •• ■^»^<»'^v It '«^tl'^»«.^»llji^t •'«»»• -^^fg
^ ORK • NIEUVV AAASTERDA.^N
PHOTO GRA-P HI
J^E
yiEW
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WASt
^^ 450 ILLUSTRATIONS *
_^51^
-,, A SOUVENIR COAAPANION TQ '"^^wO,
01^ - KING'S HANDBOOK OF NEW YORK CITY- r&j'^
^r
mMiiM!>
PUBblSHED BY
p; BOSTON AA ASS
^mmw^:
COPYRIGHT 1895, BY MOSES KING.
V
PRESS OF AMERICAN BANK NOTE CO.
^^/^^ Vyw.\AAJ.
King's Handbook of New York City.
A SUPERB VOLUME.
PRAISED BY EVERYBODY.
V ^^
^1
"Mr. Moses King deserves the undying gratitude of
the citizens of New York, and in fact of all persons who are
interested in the prosperity of the great metropolis of the
United States." --Ill iisira led Loudon Neivs. London, England.
^o5EsKi/^4
>»
/
York
This superb book of 1008
beautiful pages, on fine paper, in ele-
gant binding, and illustrated with more
than one thousand (tooo) original
photographic views, is the most elab-
orate and most costly book ever made to
illustrate and describe the City of New
Every home should have a copy. It costs
only two dollars, and will give enough pleasure and
information in the family circle to be worth far more
than its cost. Twenty-five thousand (25,000) copies have already been sold,
and the universal commendation shows that every one who possesses a copy
is absolutely delighted with it. It is surely the grandest book ever offered at
its price.
XWO DOLIvARS A COPY.
1008 Handsonme Pages, 1029 Original Vie\A7s,
30 Interesting Chapters, 72 Columns of Index.
Elegantly and Substantially Bound.
SOLD BY BOOKSELLERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD.
MOSES KING, Publisher, No. 4 Post-Office Square, BOSTON.
DUTCH COTTAGE AT NEW YORK, 1679.
PRKFACE.
Description of to-day makes history of the future. Accurate pictures are the most vivid
descriptions. The 450 photographic views in this volume tell a simple but entertaininf,' and
comprehensive story of New York in 1S94-1895. They are so arranged as to form a practical
route-guide book. The stranger who will follow ths route or order of these pictures will see
the city in the easiest and shortest manner.
This collection without te.xt should accompany "King's Handbook of New Yonk
CiTV," a superb volume of looS pages of te.xt with 1029 illustrations; more than 30,000
copies of which have already been published.
MOSES KING, Editor and Publisher.
;rt
'xsii,*?;,
BROADWAY, FROM BOWLING GREEN, IN 1828.
[COPYRIGHT 1395, BY MOSES KING.]
JOHN N. GOLDING, REAL ESTATE, No. 11 PINE STREET.
JOHN N. GOLDING,
Real Estate Agent, Auctioneer and Appraiser.
vSpecial attention given to the care of large estates,
prominent office buildings, business and
dwelling properties.
No. II PINE STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
A LONG LIST OF DWELLINGS in various localities and of all values,
arc ollored for s,\i e and i-oii pent. Details furnished on request.
HIGH CLASS VACANT LOTS in select localities for residential
IMrK()\'EMENr.
MONEY TO LOAN ox bo.nd and morigage, in sums to suit, at 4, 4,'2,
and 5 per cent.
JOHN N.G0LD1NG,REAL ESTATE AGENT, NEW YORK.
t-
_^- idliL(ijl«f '^ '■■?.-
Ij'
!ilJ.
James Elliott & Co
371 Broadway,
New York,
LINEN
Manufacturers and Importers,
DAMASKS,
NAPKINS,
TOWELS ,
WHITE GOODS,
QUILTS ,
CURTAINS,
HANDKERCHIEFS.
Nezi) York Belting & Packing Co. Limited.
The Ke>v Vorit Belting Sc racUillS Co., Limited, 15 Park Row, are
the pioneers in the manufacture of Mechanical Rubber Goods. The business was established
at Boston, Mass., in 1846, soon after the world-famous process of vulcanizing india rubber
was patented by Charles Goodyear, and from the outset the Company was favored with the
great inventor's advice and co-operation. After a period of success in Boston, the business
was moved to New York to secure the advantages offered by the metropolis. Several large
factories are operated by the concern, two at Newtown, Conn., where a valuable water-
power is owned, and a still more e.xtensive plant at Passaic, N. J. The wheels of all these
factories are kept busy turning out the very highest grade of belting, packing, hose of all
kinds, mats, tubing, bicycle tires, minor articles, and a widely known specialty, made by
them exclusively, the Vulcanite Emery Wheel, the safest fast-running emery wheel known.
A new bicycle tire of great merit, called " The League Tire," which has just been placed on
the market, is meeting with pronounced success.
The growth of this Company's business has been steady and sure, keeping pace with the
development of the rubber industry, until at the present day their sales exceed those of any
other individual concern. Every improvement in modes of manufacture has been adopted,
and the high standard of quality consistently maintained has given to their products a repu-
tation unexcelled the whole world over. Large quantities of goods are exported to various
countries, in all of which their name is a guarantee of the highest excellence.
While the Company are pioneers in the line, they have also occupied the position of
leaders both in quality and quantity of business transacted, hence the propriety of the phrase
which always accompanies their announcements — " Pioneers and Leaders."
The salesrooms, at 15 Park Row, are directly opposite the Post-Office and the Astor House.
EsTAIU.ISilED 1846.
Manufacturers of a Complete Line of
MECHANICAL RUBBER GOODS,
Belting, Packing, Hose of all kinds, Mats, Tubing, Blankets,
Rolls, Bicycle Tires, Etc
NEW YORKBELTING&PACKING CO.LTD
PIONEERS AND LEADERS. 15 PARK ROW, NEW YORK
Opposite the Post-Othce and the Astor House.
fit t|7
LIBERTY ENLIGHTENING THE WORLD.
STATUE, BY BARTHOLDI. ON BEDLOE'S ISLAND, NEW-YORK HARBOR,
The Standard History
of the Metropolis. : :
THE Mayor of New York City having read Dr. Parkhurst's letter
commending Mrs. Martha J. Lamb's admirable " History of
the City of New York," wrote to the publishers, Messrs. A. S. Barnes
& Co., that he heartily endorsed Dr. Parkhurst's opinion of the
book, a copy of which he jjossessed. Dr. Parkhurst said that the
History has no rival. No work even approaches it as a text-book of
information as to the history of the city. He holies that all citizens
will own a copy of the work, so that they may the more intelligently
comprehend what a responsibility rests upon them to treasure and
guard its interests. In order that Dr. Parkhurst's hopes may be
the better realized, the publishers reduced the price from I20.00 to
$16.00. ('I"wo volumes, royal octavo, 1620 pages, 313 illustrations,
cloth, gilt top.) People not New-Yorkers, but interested in the
story of the Metro[)olis, will be glad to have this superb work in
their libraries.
OTHER TESTIMONIALS.
" Mrs. Lamb's work is built on a solid
foundation which guarantees to it a secure
place in the historical collections of the
aye." — Iribttne, N. Y.
" Mrs. Lamb's ' History of New York
City ' should be in the library of every old
New-Yorker." — Sun, N. Y.
The late historian, Oeorge Bancroft,
wrote: "Mrs. Lamb's is, in my view, by
far the best history of the City of New
York."
The l;)te distinguished Hon. (ieorj-e
William Curtis wrote: "It is rich with
information, and the interesting story was
never so thoroughly and satisfactorily told."
The poet, Stednian, writes : "It is abso-
lutely sure of a reading and a reputation in
the distant future."
"A piece of historical painting which for
brightness of color, distinctness of outline
and general truthfulness of detail, deserves
the highest commendation." — Harper^ s
Magazine.
" As to all that belongs to the past this
record ofifers a mine of varied, interesting
and authentic information indispensable to
the student." — The Nation.
" It will be a desirable addition to private
and public libraries in all parts of the
country." — Chicago I'ridune.
" It was full time that a faithful picture
of New York should be written. Mrs.
Lamb's style is pleasant and remarkably
concise. "r-i(>«r/<'« Academy.
jfof sale bv all tiooftscUcvs, or ^clivcrc^, cbarcjcs pai^, on receipt of price bv tbc
Ipublisbcfs,
A. S. BARNES & CO., New York.
FORT WADSWORTH, THE SCHOOL SHIP AND WAR VESSELS.
VIEWS TAKEN IN NORTH RIVER AND NEW-YORK HARBOR. PHOTOS BY JOHNSTON.
%i;3-gLwwi(V) ^posmod'
n)i!i,iAiilH)K(" —
r^lj ^.
26 J 28 PARK PLACE "21 £ 23 BARCIAY ST
The F. A. Ringler Company,
The Largest Rjigraving, Designing
and Rleetrotyping Estahlislinient in
Jtmei'iea^ made a large part- — more tJian one
Jiundred — of tJie excellent Engravings oj this
book — ''Kings Photographic ]ieius of Neiv York."
Their zvorkniansJiip is particularly satisfactory, and
tfieir general bnsiness methods are very pleasing. I his
great concern is always crowded with work from all
parts of the conntry — a very natural 7'esiilt of the skill
and facilities, the promptness and stability, the moderate
charges and general biisiness-like methods.
They are in every zvay worthy of the highest com-
mendation.
MOSES KING, Publisher,
Kings Handbook of Neiu York,
King s Handbook of Boston,
King's Handbook of the United States,
Kings PJwtographic Vieivs of New York, etc.
NEW-YORK HARBOR.
VIEW FROM EAST-RIVER BRIDGE, IN 1K93.
CASTLe WILLIAMS.
THE HISTORIC FORT ON GOVERNOR'S ISLAND.
XMOf^OUGM INSI>ECTIOWS
AND
Imsurance ag^ainst loss or damagfe to propert>' and
loss of life and injury to persons caused 1j>
Steam Boiler Explosions.
The Pioneer Company of America, and tlie largest of its kind in the World. 56,000 Steam
Boilers now under its inspection.
New York Branch Office: 285 BROADWAY.
THEO. H. BABCOCK, Manager.
'■
s
-*-«»•»»-
\
4 .
Wl t WM. ^ ^ — ^.
'
VIEW IN HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT, SHOWING SOLDIERS' ARCH AND THE CONNECTICUT CAPITOL.
(^^ \ ' Vi \i
II* i '111', IvVfi'
The Travelers
Insurance Company
HARTFORD, CONN.
IS THE
Original Accident Company of America.
LARGER '1 HAN ALL OTHERS IN AMERICA
TOGETHEK.
ALSO,
Best of Life Companies.
No other Life Policies as liberal cost as little money, none
others as cheap give as much for the money.
Pays Policy-holders nearly $2,000,000 a year.
Has paid them over $25,000,000 since 1864.
ASSETS, ----- $16,600,000
SURPLUS, ----- 2,300,000.
JAMES G. BATTERSON, President.
RODNEY DENNIS, Secrktakv.
18
NETS, SEINES AND TWI N ES.
LINEN GILL NETTING A SPECIALTY
Established 1842. Capital, $350,000.
SOLE MANUFACTURERS OF
COLD MEDAL
TWINE AND NETTING
THE I.ARGEST M ANITFACTURERS
Pounds^ S('///cs, /^//rsc .Sr/z/ts, Gill A^cfs, and Nets of Fa'Cvx
Dcscripiion — Linen and ddfon — Fitted
Complete or in the Weh.
SOLE MANUFACTURERS
I ]< A 1 1 !•: NL\ K K — ;■; K( i I s r li k- f, i
HOME OFFICE:
BOSTON, MASS
Speeial att-'ntion to F.xport Orders.
BRANCH:
199 FULTON ST., NEW YORK.
THE
Hopli-Cppman Elogti
WAS FOUNDED IN THE YEAR 1 857,
AND HAS CARRIED SINCE THAT TIME
^tpflnisl^ip ([^ompang
MORE THAN THREE MILLION PASSENGERS.
THE NORTH-GERMAN LLOYD STEAMSHIP COM-
PANY is the larjiest steamship corporation in the world ; and has
run steamships to and from New York ever since 1857, enjoying
its full share of the best American patronage. Besides its Bremen-
Southampton-New York service it operates lines from New York
to the Mediterranean, from Bremen to Australia, China, Japan,
New Guinea, South America, and virtually covers both conti-
nents. Its tonnage is 301,673; its number of vessels, 78; and to
the close of 1893 it had carried upwards of three million passen-
gers. In equipment and service there is no superior line at home
or abroad. The North-German Lloyd Steamers stop at South-
ampton to accommodate passengers from and to London and
Paris. Its Mediterranean service has been an increasing success
from its inception.
THE LINES OPERATED
ARE
Bremen, Southampton, Neiv
York, TWICE WEEKLY.
New York, Gibraltar, Ge?ioa,
THREE STEAMERS A MONTH.
New York, Gibraltar. Palermo,
Naples, EVERY two weeks.
Bremen, Antwerp, Lisbon, Ba-
hia, Rio de Janeiro, Santos,
MONTHLY.
Bremen, Corunna, Vigo, Monte-
video, Bueyios Ayres, every
TEN DAYS.
Sins;apore,\^ connection with
CHINA AND NEW GUINEA LINES.
BY THE COMPANY
Bremen, Auizcerp, Southamp-
ton, Genoa, Port Said, Suez,
Aden, Colombo, Singapore,
Hong-Kong, Shanghai,
MONTHLY.
Bremen, Antivctp, Southamp-
ton, Genoa, Port Said, Sues,
Aden, Colombo, Adelaide,
Melborirne, Sydtiey, monthly
Hong-Kong, Yokohama, Hiogo
and Nagasaki, in connec-
tion WITH CHINA LINE.
Sydney, Tonga and Samoa Isl-
ands, IN CONNECTION WITH
AUSTRALIAN LINE.
OELRICHS &, CO., AGENTS, NO. 2 BOWLING GREEN, NEW YORK.
NORTH-GERMAN LLOYD STEAMSHIP COMPANY.
PIERS AT HOBOKEN. JoFFICES AT 2 BOWLING GREEN, NEW YORK.
Compagnie Generale Transatlantique.
FRENCH LINE
MAIL STEAMSHIPS
— lihTWEE.v —
NEW York, Havre, Paris.
ONLY DIRECT LINE TO FRANCE.
Stiorte$»t Route to all Principal Points on the Continent.
American Travelers to ob from Europe by this line, avoid
BOTH TRANSIT BY ENGLISH RAILWAY AND THE DISCOMFORTS OF CROSSING
THE CHANNEL, BESIDES SAVING TIME, TROUBLE AND EXPENSE.
8000 tons, 10,000 h. p.
LA NORMANDIE,"
7000 ions, 8000 h. p.
THE WORLD-KNOWN TWIN-SCREW EXPRESS MAIL STEAMER LA TOURAINE."
THE NEW EXPRESS STEAMERS.
"LA TOURAINE," " LA BOURCOCNE," " LA BRETACNE,"
10,000 tons, 14,000 h. p. 8000 tons, io,oou h. p
"LA CHAMPAGNE," " LA CASCOCNE,"
8000 tons, 10,000 h. p. 8000 tons, 10,000 h. p
For all Information and Tickets, apply to
AUGUSTIN FORGET, Gen'l Agent for United States and Canada,
3 Bowling Green, NEW YORK.
PARIS.— HEAD OFFICE, 6 Rue Anber; PASSAGE, 12 Boulevard des Capucines. HAVRE. —H. DE
GAALON, Agent Prinoipal, 35 Quai d'Orleans. L«M»0\.— P. FANET, Agent, 5 Gracechurch
St., E. C. I-1VKKPOOL.-P. FANET, Agent, 28 Chapel St.
Passengers embark from Pier 42 (new number). North River, foot of Morton St.. New York.
24
HAMBURG-AMERICAN
LINE.
New York, Southampton (London and Paris) and Hamburg.
FAST LINE TO
LONDON and the EUROPEAN CONTINENT
THE TWIN-SCREW EXPRESS STEAMERS OF THIS LINE, "AUGUSTA VICTORIA,"
"COLUMBIA," " FURST BISMARCK" AND "NORMANNIA" ARE OF 13-16,000
HORSE-POWER, AND ARE UNSURPASSED FOR SAFETY, SPEED AND COMFORT.
THIS IS THE ONLY LINE HAVING A WEEKLY TWIN-SCREW EXPRESS STEAMER
SERVICE TO EUROPE.
THE.SE STEAMERS DO NOT CARRY COTTON.
T
HE HAMBURG- AMERICAN LINE holds the reeord
for fastest time froni New York to Southanipton and
the European Continent. Fastest crossing — 6 days,
lO hours, 32 minutes, equal to about 5 days, 19 hours
to Queenstown.
LONDON.
steamers run to the docks at Southampton. No
transfer by tender. The distance by rail between
Southanipton and London (N'Vaterloo Station) by the
HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE'S Special Train is less
than 2 hoLU's.
PARIS.
The LONDON & SOUTHWESTERN RAILWAY
CO., with its fine ISTew Steamers, maintains a daily
service from Southampton to Havre ; time to Paris,
about 12 hours. Paris can also be reached from Lon-
don in 8 hours.
riAMBlJRG.
The most important commercial centre of Conti-
nental Europe and one of its most beautiful cities, has
an excellent Express Train Service with all parts of
the interior.
Tickets are good to London, Havre or Hamburg-. Through Tickets to Paris at special rates.
HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE,
37 BROADWAY, new vork 125 LA SALLE ST., Chicago.
ATLAS LINE
MAIL STEAMERS
Established 1872.
WEEKLY SAILINGS FROM PIER 55, N. R., NEW YORK,
TO
WEST INDIES and CENTRAL AMERICA
I'AR 1 K LI AKLY
Hayti, Cartliajjfeiia, Savanilla, Colon,
Oreytowii, and
Port Kinion, in Costa Rica.
PIM, FOR^WOOD & KEYLOCK,
GENERAL AGENTS,
No. 24 STATE ST., NE"*V YORK CITY.
ATLAS MAIL LINE TO THE WEST INDIES, PIER SS, NORTH RIVER.
SOUTHERN END OF NEW YORK.
BATTERY PARK, ELEVATED RAILROADS AT SOUTH AND STATEN ISLAND FERRIES, AND BARGE OFFICE.
BATTERY PARK AND CASTLE GARDEN.
BIRD'S-EYE VIEW FROM WASHINGTON BUILDING, LOOKING SOUTHEAST.
Buffalo, N.Y.
|V|anufacturers
AND
^[>aders_Bank
CAPITAL, -
SURPLUS, -
$900,000.00
$500,000.00
PASCAL P. PRATT, President.
BRONSON C. RUMSEY, Vice Pres.
ROBERT L. FRYER, 2d Vice Pres.
JAMES H. MADISON, Cashier.
HARRY T. RAMSDELL, Ass't Cashier.
R. H. DANFORTH, 2d Ass't Cashier.
Collections Will Receive Prompt Attention
Brown Bros. & Go.'s Letters of Credit Issued
Manufacturers and Traders Bank, Buffalo, N. Y.
•^
NEW-YORK HARBOR AND CASTLE GARDEN.
IIRD'S-EYE VIEW FROM WASHINGTON BUILDING. LOOKING SOUTHWEST.
P t» S w fe i
SOUTH STREET AND HARBOR.
FOOT OF JEANNETTE PARK AT EAST RIVER.
JEANNETTE PARK AND COENTIES SLIP.
VIEW OF EAST RIVER AND BROOKLYN J AND THE CANAL BOAT FLEET.
LOWER NEW YORK.
NORTHEAST FROM UNITED STATES ARMY BUILDING, SHOWING EAST RIVER AND BROOKLYN.
MISSION AND EMIGRANT HOUSES,
ON STATE STREET.
33
OF BUFFALO,
Buffalo, New York.
BANK OF BUFFALO BUILDING IN BUFFALO.
CAPITAI^, $joo,ooo.oo. SUKn.lS, $300,000.00.
(m.\ >. S1AT« IIKltD, l•l•l.^i(l,.nl, SllEU.IIAN S. liO(iEKS, VLe-I'icsidinl. 11,1.101 T ( . JlillOtCU,. (aslii
JOHN I,. DAMKI.S, Ass'l Ciisliici-; (IKOIiCK JIKADMAY, Ass'l CiisliiiT.
Special Attention Given to Collections on Buffalo and Vicinit;
Accounts ok Banks and Bankers Received on the Most Favoraule
Terms Consistent with Sound Bankinc.
Peal)0(li]'s Australasian Packets
HENRY W. PEABODY & CO,
Shipping Export and Import Gommission Merciiants.
Exporting and Importing all kinds of raw and manufactured products.
Ships loaded and dispatched to foreign ports.
Consignment of ships at New York and Boston attended to.
Correspondence invited. Indents and merchandise consignments solicited.
Offices: 58 TNEW STREET, IVEW YORK,
Near Ihe Produce Exchange.
Also at BOSTON, LOT^MOIV, SVOBJEV, MHRIDA, MAI^JII..^.
PEABODY'S AUSTRALASIAN PACKETS, OFFICES, 58 NEW STREET, NEW YORK.
HENRY W. PEABODY & CO. PEABODY'S AUSTRALASIAN PACKETS
OFFICE : 68 NEW STREET, NEAR THE PRODUCE EXCHANGE.
37
Established 1827. Established 1865.
CONSOUIDATED JUNE 12, 1893.
Joupnal of CorampHF
anti
CommFHifll BuIlFtin,
17 and 19 Beaver St. and 64 New St.,
NEW YORK CITY.
/"^ ONCEDED to be the leading Financial and
Commercial paper of the United States, and
as such circulates thoroughly through all
branches of trade and in all sections of the
world.
Advertising Rates, Subscription Rates,
20c. per line, $12.00 per year,
Agate Measurement. Payable in Advance.
THE JOURNAL OF COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL BULLETIN.
No. 19 EEAVER STREET AND No, 64 NEW STREET. OPPOSITE THE PRODUCE EXCH
39
John Osborn, Son & Co.
A RECORD OF SIXTY YEARS.
[Sketch from "King's Handbook of New York City."]
JOHN OSBORN, SON & CO., gener.il merchants, have offices at 45 Beaver Street.
The house is a very old one. John Osborn came to New York from Oporto, where
he had a commercial house, and established himself in January, 1836. Some years
later he took his brother Robert into partnership, under the style of John and Robert
Osborn; the place of business being at m Wall Street. In 1854 John Osborn erected
the building which they now occupy, then in the center of the dry-goods trade. A year
or so later the trade began moving farther up town. About 1856 the firm removed to
45 Beaver Street, and a year later the firm was dissolved by the death of Robert. John
Osborn continued under his own name. In April, 1869, he associated with himself his
son, Francis Pares Osborn, and Timothy Stevens, under the co-partnership name of John
Osborn. Son & Co. The firm had business relations with foreign countries (partic-
ularly with Great Britain, France, Spain and Portugal), and continued until May 16, 1869,
when it was dissolved by the deith of John Osborn. Immediately a co-partnership was
formed by Francis Pares Osborn, Timothy Stevens arid Mary C. Osborn, to contiune the
business under the same style. There was no change in the "personnel" until May i,
1875, when the co-p;irtnership was dissolved. Then a limited partnership was formed by
Francis Pares Osborn as general, and Mary C. Osborn as special partner, to continue the
business under the name of John Osborn, Son & Co. In 1876 a branch house was opened
in Montreal, the head office remaining in New York. On January i, 1884, a new limited
partnership was formsd between Francis Pares Osborn, Charles Spencer Osborn, William
Osborn, Robert A. Osborn, and Mary C. Osborn, to continue four years under the same
name. This partnership was renewed in January, 1888. On December 28, 1891, Mary C.
Osborn, the special partner and mother of the general partners, died at her home on
Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn, where she had lived for forty-two years, and which was the
birth-place of William and Robert A. Osborn. On March 13, 1892, the senior partner,
Francis Pares Osborn, died ; the firm, however, being a limited partnership, continued.
In May, 1892, the firm established a Western Department, with offices at 52? and 523
Monadnock Block, Chicago. On December 31, 1892, a new firm was formed under a
general partnership, composed of the remaining partners, Charles Spencer Osborn, William
Osborn, and Robert A. Osborn, under the same style of heretofore. On May i, 1893,
owing to increasing business in the Western Department, and to offer better facilities to
all friends who might visit the World's Columbian E.xposition, the Western Department
removed their offices to the Auditorium Hotel Building, on Michigan Avenue, where they
have large and spacious offices on the ground floor, giving them better accommodations
to do their increasing business, which is making Chicago the distributing point of the
West; also in 1893 the firm opened an office in Philadelphia. On November 15, 1894, Charles
Spencer Osborn retired from the firm. Among the agencies which this firm has control of
in its wine and spirit department is that of the old and well-known brand of Piper-Heidsieck
Champagne. For years they have imported only one grade of Champagne, namely Piper-
Heidsieck, "Sec," but this year, considering that American connoisseurs are demanding
also a Brut wine, they have been induced to import a real Brut, known under the name of
Pieper-Heidsieck, Brut E.xtra, which is pronounced the highest grade of real Brut that is
known on this markei. During the many years which this firm has been in existence it has
had business relations with all parts of Europe, the South American Republics, and the
West Indies, importing and e.xporting the products of these countries, as well as doing a
banking business ; and the reputation and high standing of the house are well-known
throughout the world.
^f- ^^
JOHN OSBORN, SON & CO.
No. 45 BEAVER STREET, BETWEEN BROAD AND WILLIAM STREETS,
DYCKERHOFF
Portland Cement
Is superior to any other Portland Cement made. It is very
finely ground, always uniform and reliable, and of such extra-
ordinary strength that it will permit the addition of 25 per
cent, more sand, etc., than any other well known Portland
Cements, and produce the most durable work. It is unalter-
able in volume, and not liable to crack. The foundations of
many of the most important structures recently erected in
New York were constructed of the Dyckerhoft' Portland
Cement, amonii' which are the followino;:
Grant Monument, Riverside Park
Delmonico's
Washington Memorial Arch
Metropolitan Telephone Co.
Statue of Liberty
Postal Telegraph Co.
Brooklyn Soldiers' and Sailors'
United States Army Building
Memorial Arch
United States Trust Co.
Equitable Life Assurance Society
Union Trust Co.
New York Life Insurance Co.
Farmers' Loan and Trust Co.
New York Times
Bank of America
New York World
Corn Exchange Bank
Puck
Hotel Imperial
Judge
Hotel Waldorf
Metropolitan Opera House
Hotel Netherland
University Building
Hotel Savoy ^^0 others
Pamiililet wilh direct'oiis, tests atul testimonials sent free.
E. TH i ELE, Sole Agent U.S.
78 William St., New York.
DELMONICO'S.
BEAVER AND lAILLIAM STREETS, OPPOSITE THE COTTON EXCHANGE,
[{r)3ii{\), |\Iae[?od 9 \{Li\)r)e,
Man^-p^,
Exc:,\)3r}(^e
13 William St. New York,
CORN EXCHANGE BANK BUILDING.
ON ALL PARTS OF EUROPE.
Money Transferred by Mail and Telegraph
to any part of the World.
betters of Qredit for Jraueler3
AVAILABLE EVERYWHERE.
Buy and Sell FOREIGN COIN and BANK
NOTES at ruling rates.
QustofT) )iou5(^ ^ poru/ardi9(^ Dep't.
Attend to all CUSTOM HOUSE business,
entering good,s for Consumption or in
Bond.
Shipments for Export and Iniport promptly
and carefully attended to.
•> lev/ yopj^. .;.
i I I I I -"
, 1 1 s f _ . r j I ^
* »
d ^4 •* --^
■«• ■**
"- " 5'A^J I If rr
*- JT
^ '^ •«►
.J , -I. _»» •■«•<(»•'*"•■• "^ *^ 'w' «!,> .,
1 ^ 1 ^ I! 2
CORN EXCHANGE BANK OF NEW YORK.
WILLIAM STREET, NORTHWEST CORNER OF BEAVER STREET, OPPOSITE THE COTTON EXCHANGE.
. INCORPORATED lS22 .
THE
Farmers' Loan and 1 rust Company
NEW YORK
Nos. i6, i8, 20 AND 22 W11.LIAM Street
Capital,
Surplus,
$1,000,000.00
4,263, 192.22
The Company is a legal depository for moneys paid into Court, and is
authorized to act as Executor, Adtninistrator, Trustee, Guardian, Receiver, and
in all other Fiduciary capacities.
Acts as Trustee under Mortgages made by Railroad and other Corpora-
tions, and as Registrar and Transfer y^gent of Stocks and Bonds.
Receives deposits upon Certificate of Deposit, or subject to check if
accounts are inactive, and allows interest on daily balances.
R. G. ROI.STON, President.
IV. D. SEARLS. yicc-Prcsidciit. EDIVIN S. M/tRSTON, Sccrclaiy.
IVM. H. LEUPP, 2d Vice-President. SAMUEL SLOAN, Jr., Ass't Secy.
BOARD OF
SAMUEL SLOAN.
WILLIAM WALDORF ASTOR.
EDWARD R. BELL.
WILLIAM REMSEN.
JAMES ROOSEVELT.
W. H. WISNER.
C. H. THOMPSON.
D. O. MILLS.
HENRY HENTZ.
HENRY A. C. T.\YLOR.
FRANKLIN D. LOCKE-
CHARLES L. COLBY.
ROSEWELL G. ROLSTON.
DIRECTORS:
PERCY R. PYNE.
JAMES STILLMAN.
ALEXANDER T. VAN NEST.
ISAAC BELL.
THOMAS RUTTER.
MOSES TAYLOR PYNE.
JAMES NEILSON.
ROBERT C. BOYD.
H. VAN RENSSELAER KENNEDY.
EDWARD R. BACON.
ROBERT F. BALLANTINE.
CHARLES A. PEABODY, JR.
CLEVELAND H. DODGE.
46
FARMERS' LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
WILLIAM STREET, NORTHEAST CORNER OF BEAVER STREET.
THE NEW YORK COTTON EXCHANGE.
BEAVER, WILLIAM AND PEARL STREETS.
49
Samuel Wilde's Sons,
VVhy proprietors of
the old rellible coffee
house in dutch street,
established 1814, known
to almost every one
i^ from maine to texas,
impor ters and dealers
in teas, coffees, and
manufacturers of pure
ground spices and
baring powder,
At the Well Known Establishment oi
SAMUEL WILDE'S SONS,
9, 11 and 13 DUTCH ST.,
' ricu) yorh. •
ff-^'^f^i c stlH
\
1 :. r- f fe \.k% r**
ts f *
iF W ^
-< »idS
ju -
R. W. GIBSON, ARCHITECT.
THE NL.V .uiiK COFFEE EXCHANGE.
HANOVER SQUARE. PEARL STREET, BETWEEN HANOVER AND BEAVER STREETS, ADJOINING COTTON EXCHANGE.
SEARS & WHITE
ESTABLISHED more than forty years, and always situated at the
very center of the busiest part of New York, and thoroughly
equipped to supply corporations, business firms and individuals
with everything in the line of stationery and office supplies, printing,
engraving, lithographing and kindred work.
IRobcrt 36. Scars llUilliam ICl. IClbitc
5FPli'"?S 9 \ I I HUE Manufacturing Department
r \ yjj I ' 57 Broad Street
fjo. 1 \]J\i\\m Street
[lapouer Square j^^U/ yoi=l\
OPP. COTTON EXCHANGE
Established 1855
Sucoesscrs to EUGENE R. COLE
Our stationery department comprises blank books of all kinds, pens
and pencils, ink and ink stands, foreign and domestic writing papers,
knick-knacks, etc. A specialty is a line of gold pens and holders to suit
all people.
We solicit correspondence from business men in any part of liie
country.
^ WILLIAM ST. Sears & White ^^ ^^^^^ st.
SEARS & WHITE, STATIONERS AND PRINTERS.
No. 1 WILLIAM STREET, OPPOSITE THE OLD AND NEW COTTON EXCHANGES.
JOHN DWIGHT & CO., SODA MANUFACTURERS.
offices: No n OLD SLIP. rACTORIES: FIRST AVENUE AND EAST 112rH STREET.
HENRY BATJER.
ALFRED LEE6.
FERDINAND HARTWiG.
ESTABLISHED 1855.
H.A.BATJER&CO.
Ilnipoiters
AND
Coinmieeion nDercbants,
77 Water Street (Jrcrsuio/) Ne\v Yorl^.
PxEPRESENTING
BOLL & O.
PELLISSON PERE & CO.
E. J. F. BRANDS, .
BOORD & SON .
JOHN RAMSAY, .
P. HOPPE
W. VAN KEMPEN,
OTTO OBERFuLL,
AXEL BAGGE & CO.
J. B. LYSHOLM,
ROBT. PORTER & CO.
COCHRAN & CO.
AUliUSTO ACHIARDI, .
R. C. IVISON, ....
C. RUDOLPH, NOCETTI & CO.
W. & J. GRAHAM & CO.
SALVADOR GUELL, .
FRANCOIS DURAND.
BROUILLONET FRERES & CO.
LACAVE & CO
JULES MERMAN & CO.
P. & E. RUDELLE, .
ROYE LABAUME & CO.
G. M. PABSTMANN SOHN, .
FRANCESCO CINZANO & CO.
CHAMPAGNES
COGNACS
GINS
OLD TOM GIN
SCOTCH WHISKEY
CORDIALS
ARRACK
KIRSCH and ZWETSCHENWASSER
MILITAR PUNCH
AQUAVIT
BULL DOG ALE and STOUT
GINGER ALE
OLIVE OIL
SHERRIES
PORTS
MALAGAS and MUSCATELS
CLARETS and SAUTERNES
CLARETS
BURGUNDIES
HOCK WINES
VERMOUTH
La Grande Chartreuse — Prepared by the Carthusian Monks.
Kronthal & Wilhehns Quelle Natural Mineral Waters.
lift \".««.-.*«, • — '-- X.
i^j / f /,/ // /i
"^ -ZS^'J , ^a^/ {^ulimu urn
I I I -J I
\ I I I I
A msinck R uilding
HANOVKR SQUARE,
6 to 9 Hanovkr Street,
BETWEEN BEAVER AND PEARL STREETS.
ATTR/\CTIVE OFFICES TO LET.
A DESIRABI^E LOCALITY.
A MODERNIZED BUILDING.
THE AMSINCK BUILDING, occupied for the greater part by
the General Offices of Messrs. G. AMSINCK & CO.,
Importing, Exporting and Shipping Merchants, has been
newly remodelled throughout, and a part of the building has been
divided into very attractive offices, with modern conveniences,
vv'hich are offered to a few acceptable and permanent tenants.
The building was formerly occupied by the " Joiinuil of
Co III merer," and is within a minute's walk of the Cotton Exchange,
the Coffee Exchange, the Custom House, Wall Street, etc. It fronts
on Hanover S(juare, and is within short distance of Wall Street and
Broadway.
J'^or frniis ami paiiiciilars, applx to
RICHARD M. MONTGOMERY, Agent,
59 and 6i Pine Street, NEW YORK.
58
AMSINCK BUILDING: G. AMSINCK & GO.
NOS. 6 TO 9 HANOVER STREET, BETWEEN PEARL AND BEAVER STREETS, HANOVER SQUARE.
ify'f'^*
Iff? 't!'^
.^V.
Z'**^
.,'<^
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ii ii ' "
DELAWARE, LACKAWANNA & WESTERN RAILROAD COMPANY.
GENERAL OFFICES: EXCHANGE PLACE AND WILLIAM STREET.
^•»"^« *■**•*
I
i-iW
^rt i
THE MANHATTAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
64 AND 66 BROADWAY, BETWEEN WALL STREET AND EXCHANGE PLACE.
Union Trust
Company
OF ]VE>V Y ORK,
UnUvi Trust Co. Buildings 8o P)ROADWAY, NEW YORK.
Capital, $1,000,000. ♦ Surplus, $4,700,000.
Authorized to act as Executor, Administrator, Guardian,
Receiver or Trustee, and is
% ^eflal Sle;paettc»x*vj fox* |ilc»nctj.
Acts as Trustee of Mortofaffes of Corporations and ac-
cepts the transfer agency and registry of stocks.
Allows interest on deposits, which may be made at anv
time, and withdrawn on five days' notice, with interest for
the whole time they remain with the Company.
For the convenience of depositors, this Company also
opens current accounts subject, in accordance with its rules,
to check at sight, and allows interest upon the resulting
daily balances. Such checks pass through the Clearing
House.
Attends specially to the MANAGEMENT OF REAL
ESTATE and to the collection and remittance of rents.
It makes ample provision in its NEW BURGLAR AND
FIRE-PROOF VAULTS for the safe keeping of securities
placed in its custody, on which it collects and remits income.
VVm. Whitewright, E. B. Wesi.ev, Geokgic G. Willi.-\ms,
R. T. W11.SON, D. H. McAlpin, R. G. Remsen,
Wm. F. Russei.l, George B. Cakh.\rt, Am.-\s.a J. P.\rker,
C. D. Wood, H. Van Rennsl'k Kennedy, Samuel F. Barger,
D. C. Hays, Jamks H. Ogilvie, Robert Goelep,
Wm. Alex. Duer, James T. Woodward, W. Emlen Roosevelt,
Charles H. Lkland, Cornelius Va.nderbilt, Chauncey M. Depew,
Edward Klmg, Augustus Lowell.
W.M. Whitewright, (,, G. Williai\ls, C. D. Wood,
I). C. H A^s, E. B. Wesley, James T. Woodward,
Wm. a. Duek, W. Emlen Roosevelt.
EDWARD KING, President.
. . AUGUST
JAMES H. OGILVIE, ,' vice-rresidents. j. v. B. THAYER, Assistant Secretary.
CORNELIUS D. WOOD, ) ,^. ^ ., AUGUSTUS W. KELLEY, Secretary.
,- Vice-Presidents.
■,■»%-,
UNION TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
BROADWAY, OPPOSITE RECTOR STREET, BETWEEN WALL STREET AND EXCHANGE PIACF.
New Style.
Waterman's
Ideal Fountain Pen
Claims your attention for these
Points of Excellence:
The unsurj)asscd quality of its gold pens. They write as easily
as steel pens, and your flivorite pen once selected is always the same.
The reliability of its feed, which lias been proved by ten years'
use. It is always ready and writes continuously withr)ut shaking, and
the ink does not run out.
The superiority of its new Style of holder (see cut). It is
smooth and pleasant to the fingers, cleanly in the pocket, and con-
venient and comfortable everywhere.
Try one. If it does not please vou, return it and take back your
mone}\
Send for illustrated price-list with testimonials.
L. E. Waterman Co.,
157 Broadway, New York.
Old Style.
TRINITY CHURCH— PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL.
BROADWAY, BETWEEN RECTOR AND THAMES STREETS, AT THE HEAD OF WALL STREET,
77
UNDERWRITERS
- - AT - -
The Lloyds of New York City
D. R. SATTERLEE & CO.
^^Itonicvs and iMjimgers,
•44:, 46 and 4S Cedar St., - - NEW YORIv.
THE LLOYDS OF NEW YORK CITY" was organized in 1892, and
removed from No. 20 Wall Street in March, 1894, to their present
quarters in the Continental Fire Building, where tlie\' do a general insur-
ance business, not only writing fire risks in tlieir own " Lloyds," but
place insurance in otiier " Llo3'ds " and Stock Companies for insurance
agents in all parts of the I'nited States through the brokerage firm of
D. R. Satierlke & Co., who have had over twenty years' experience, ten
years and more as President of one of the largest Stock Fire Insurance
Companies, and ten years as Insurance Brokers.
ADVISORY COMMITTEE.
ANDREW J. BATES, of A. J. Bates & Co. GEORGE P. JOHNSON, Treas. N. Y. Bis-
Soaf and Shoe Maiiufactjircrs. cuit Co. and Manager Diamond Match Co.
MILO M. BELDING, Jr., of Balding Bros. N. DENLSON MORGAN, Pres. Globe Sta-
& Co. Silk Manufacttircrs. tionery and Printing Co.
WM. C. DREYER, Pres. American Consoli- AARON H. RATHBONE, of A. H. Rath-
dated Fibre Co. bone & Co. Insurance Brokers.
EOUIS C. FULLER, Pres. Electric Cutlery DOUGLASS R. SATTERLEE, of D. R.
Co. Satlerlee & Co. Insurance Brokers.
SUBSCRIBERS,
Uicliidniif als^o the "t/Jdvi.Hiiy Coiiiiiiitlcc."
I). R. SATTERLEE & CO.
WORTHINGTON SMITH & CO., New ANDREW B. KNOWLSON, Sand Lake,
York. Silk and Millinery Gooiis. N. Y. Knit Goods Mamifacturer.
MARTIN E. WALDSTEIN, New York, of ALEXANDER M. KNOWLSON, Troy,
Maas & Waldstein. N. Y. Drug-gist.
WILLIAM LOFT, New York. Manufact- E. K. SATTERLEK, New York, of D. R.
iiring Confectiotier. S^ilterlee & Co.
D. R. SATTERLEE & CO., Attorneys and Managers, NEW YORK.
TRINITY CHURCH BRONZE DOORS.
TWO OF THE SIX DOORS GIVEN IN 1394 BY THE ASTOH FAMIL
JOHN PARSON A. B. LEACH
Farson, Leach & Co.
Corner Broadway and Wall St.
, „___ United Bank Building
~ ^^PP- Trinity Church
NEW YORK
No. 1 1 5 Dearborn Street
CHICAGO
Public Securities
OUR SPECIALTY
City, County- and State Loans
SUITABLE FOR
TRUST AND SAVING FUNDS
CORRESPONDENCE INVn'ED
80
TRINITY CHURCH, VIEW LOOKING TO THb bOUiHWbt
BROADWAY, AT THE HEAD OF WALL STREET.
The National Bank
of the Republic
OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK,
Corner Broadwav and W^all Street.
(L'apital, $1,500,000
§xtvplu$ aub |tvofit$, $940,000
OLIVER S. CARTER, President. C. H. STOUT, Cashier.
E. H. PULLEN, Vice-President. W B. T. KEYSER, Ass't Cashier.
George B. Carhart, V.'illliam H.Tu.linghast, William Barbour,
Oliver S. Carter, Chas. R. Flint, James A. Blair.
Sumner R.Stone, A. H. Wilder, Geo. C. Rand,
[). II. McAlpin, James S. Warren, E. II. Pullen.
Accounts of banks and bankers received.
Correspo7idcn ce solicited.
Buy and sell United States bonds, and make transfers and exclianq-es
in Washington, 2vitJwnt additional charge.
laily balances,
and checks against the same are payable through the New York
Clearing House. The Manhattan Trust Company is authorized
to accept Trusts of every description, and to act as Executor,
Administrator, Trustee, Guardian or Receiver, and also as Trans-
fer Agent, Registrar of Stocks and Bonds, and Trustee under
mortgages. The Company gives special attention to the manage-
ment of estates and to the collection of rents and income.
DIRECTORS
.'\uGUST Belmont, New York John Kean, Jr. ...New Jersey
H. W. Cannon' New York John Howard Latham, N. Y.
R. J. Cross New York John G. Moore New York
Rudulph Elt. is, Philadelphia F,. D. Randolph.. . .New York
John R. Ford New York James O. Sheldon, New York
.-Xmos T. French. .New York Edward Tuck; New York
John N. A. Griswold, N. Y. John I.W.\TERBi:RV,New York
H. L. HiGGiNSON Boston R.T.Wilson ?>!ew York
OFFICERS
JOHN I. VVATKRBl'RY, President JOHN KEAN, Jr., Vice-President
AMOS T. FRENCH, Second Vice-President
CHARLES H. SMITH, Secretary VV. PIERSON HAMILTON, Treasurer
STRONG cS: CADWALADER, Attorneys JOHN L. CADWALAUER, Counsel
N. W. HARRIS & CO
BANKERS
15 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.
BOSTON : 70 STATE STREET.
CHICAGO: 163 DEARBORN STREET.
STATE, CITY, COUNTY AND SCHOOL BONDS
BOUGHT AND SOLD
LIST OF SECURITIES LEGAL FOR TRUSTEES FURNISHED ON
APPLICATION.
N. Wetmore Halsey,
RESIDENT PARTNER.
N. W. HARRIS & CO., BANKERS.
WILKS BUILDING, No. 115 WALL STREET, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF BROAD, ADJOINING STOCK EXCHANGE.
93
PEARMAIN & BROOKS,
(members boston stock exchangeI
53 State Street,
Boston Stock Exchange Building, Room 218, BOSTON.
Telegraph Codes furnished on application.
Orders in Boston and New "York markets promptly
executed. Investment Securities for Sale.
CONNECTED by TELEPHONE,
S. B. PEARMAIN. L. LORING BROOKS.
THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.
MAIN FACADE ON BROAD STREET, WEST SIDE, NEAR WALL STREET
95
S. VV. RICHARDSON. WILLIAM H. HILL.
HENRY W. DODD. FRANK E. JAMES.
KSTA.BLISHED 18T1.
RICHARDSON, HILL & CO,
No. 40 Water St., Boston.
Mi'iiilhTs of the 'J{ctc York Slock Exchange and the "Boston Stock Excliamrc.
^Itov Interest on -Veposits snbject to Sight Check.
BUY AND SELL ON COMMISSION
STOCKS AND BONDS
EITHER FOR CASH OR ON .MARGIN,
AND DEAL IN ■■:■.■;;;:■.:.■..■.:....
INyESTMENT SECURITIES .^ND COMMERCIAL TAPER.
''Private IVire Connections.
RICHARDSON, HILL & CO.
40 WATER STREET, BOSTON, MASS.
96
RHODE ISLAND HOSPITAL
. TRUST COMPANY •
SfC ^% Providence, R. I.
Capital, ----- $1,000,000
Surplus, - _ - - 500,000
Undivided Profits, - - 152,000
Deposits over - - - 15,000,000
Gross Assets over - - 17,000,000
HERBERT J. WELLS, President.
SAMX R. DORRANCE, Vice-President.
EDWARD S. CLARK, Secretary.
■ /'■■ WILLIAM A. GAMWELL, Asst Sec'y
DIRECTORS.
CHRISTOPHER LIPPITT, ROWLAND HAZARD,
ROYAL C. TAFT, EDWARD D. PEARCE,
ROBERT H. I. GODDARD, HORATIO N. CAMPBELL
GEORGE W. R. MATTESON, ROBERT KNIGHT,
SAMUEL S. SPRAGUE, JOHN W. DANIELSON,
WILLIAM D. ELY, HERBERT J. WELLS,
ROBERT I. GAMMELL, JOHN C. PEGRAM,
WILLIAM BINNEY, LYMAN B. GOFF,
WILLIAM B. WEEDEN, EUGENE W. MASON,
GEORGE GORDON KING.
CORRESrON'DENCE INI 7 TED.
99
1 789 1 799 J '^95
Ten years after
GEORGE WASHINGTON
was made President of the Untied States,
the Prouidence Washington Insurance Co.
was iiicorporated in Rhode Island. It has
bee?i constantly in business ever since, and
is noiv in its niuetv-sixtli year.
Providence Washington
Insurance Co.
INCORPORATED 1799.
20 Market Square, PROVIDEIVCE, R. I.
Cash Capital, $400,000.00
Net Stirpltts, 45,987.20
Unpaid lyosses and other Chiinis ai;-ainst
Company, . . . . * . . . 168,033.01
Re-instirance Reserve, ..... 603,281.98
Assets, Janiiarv 1st, 1894, . . $1,217,302.19
J. H. DE WOLF, President. GEO. E. BIXBY, Treasurer.
J. B. BRANCH, Vice-President. E. L. WATSON, Secretary.
DIRECTOKS:
ROWLAND HAZARD. J. H. DE WOLF. WM. GROSVENOR, WM. AMES.
F. W. CARPENTER. R. L GAMMELL. E. PHILIP MASON.
ROYAL C. TAFT. EUGENE W. MASON. JOHN S. PALMER.
AGE^I^CICS XHROIIGHOITT THE IBilON.
New York Agent: W. S. BANTA, North-west corner of
Cedar and William Streets.
THE WASHINGTON STATUE IN FRONT OF UNITED STATES SUB-TREASURY.
WALL ST., NORTHEAST CORNER OF NASSAU ST. ON THIS SPOT GEORGE WASH'NGTON WAS INAUGURATED PRESIDENT.
19t
1860
THIRTY-FIVE YEARS
1895
THE WASHINGTON
Life Insurartce
Company of . .
New York.
• •
DIRECTORS.
GEORGE N. LAWRENCE.
LEVI P. MORTON.
MERRITT TRIMBLE.
GEORGE A. ROBBINS.
W. A. BREWER, JR.
ROBERT BOWNE.
CHAS. H. LUDINGTON.
FRANCIS SPEIR.
WM. HAXTUN.
BENJAMIN HAXTUN.
EDWIN H. MEAD.
HENRY F. HITCH.
CHARLES P. BRITTON.
FRANCIS G. ADAMS.
FREDERIC R. COUDERT.
D.AVID THOMSON.
HAROLD A. .SANDERSON.
ROLAND G. MITCHELL.
RANDOLPH F. PURDY.
GEORGE M. HARD.
JOHN HOPSON, JR.
HENRY S. HARPER.
E. S. FRENCH.
JOHN W. BRANNAN, M.D.
HENRY MEIGS.
W. HAXTUN,
y. President and Secretary .
E. S. FRENCH,
2rf Vice-President.
CYRUS MUNN,
Assistant Sfcretarv.
ISRAEL C. Pn<:RSON, Ph. D
Actitarv .
J. W. BRANNAN, M.D.
Medical Director.
FOSTER & THOMSON.
Attorneys^ 52 Walt St., ,V. V.
W. A. BREWER, Jr.
President.
ASSETS, ,g; 14,000,000.
The IVashing'ton's Assets comprise the largest proportion oj
First Mortgage Loans on improved Real Estate of
any Li/e Insurance Coiitpany in the World.
The holdings of most Life Insurance Companies (at
a time when losses on railroad, industrial, and manufact-
uring' securities have reached Thousands of Millions), con-
trasted with the first Mortgage loans of the Washington
on real estate, give force to this Official Endorsement by
the Hon. Superintendent, after an exhaustive examina-
tion of the Company :
" /;" is most agreeable to me to know that your Company
discloses a most excellent condition of affairs. ^^
Signed, JAMES F. PIERCE,
Superintendent.
Particulars relating to The Washington's Trust Fund
Policy and other plans of insurance, obtained by apply-
ing to the Company's agents.
t^Ejai-
TriE OLD UNITED STATES rfOTEL,
OF BOSTON,
has maintained its RESPECTABILITY AND EXCELLENCE.
Originally the largest Hotel in Boston, it has been twice
enlarged years ago, by the extensive wings on Kingston and
Lincoln Streets, named respectively Oregon and Texas.
During the past five years it has been under the management of
Mr. TILLY HAYNES, of Springfield, Mass.
who has completely renovated, enlarged and improved the prop-
erty, and last year added still another hundred rooms, by building
across from Texas to Oregon.
Think of a Hotel from Texas to Oregon, and you will understand
why this notice is written which is to say that the UNITED
STATES recommends itself for its quiet, orderly management, and
the notable character of its guests, its numerous public rooms and
grand old parlors, broad halls and numerous stairways, while none
of its 500 Guest Rooms are above the fourth floor.
These, with its very central location, its most excellent
I I / table, and moderate charges, recommend it to all who
1/ A/ have once shared its hospitality.
104
A SUGGESTION
TO
EVERY
NEW YORKER
When a visitor from any city, especially from abroad, comes to your office
or to your residence present him, with your compliments written in the front,
with a copy of " King's Handbook of New York City."
Its cost to you is a mere trifle, but the recipient will appreciate it for a
lifetime.
While \our guest he will look over it and gain more information and in-
terest in your city than you can take time to give him in several hours.
When he has gone home he has an exhaustive souvenir of everything that
he saw, and all that he failed to see, while on his visit.
Imagine yourself in London, or Paris, or Yokohama, and a friend kindly
gave a book with 1029 pictures showing every important feature of every kind
within its borders, embodied in lOoS pages of text interestingly and thoroughly
describing every phase of the city's life and its institutions, could you fail to
be gratified? All this is found in " King's Handbook of New York," and
besides its arrangement by topics in thirty chapters, it has at its close an elab-
orate detailed index of 72 columns with about 5000 distinct references.
And besides the gratification and appreciation of your guest or visitor,
every New Yorker can find in "King's Handbook" enough to make him
feel proud of the city within which he resides and of which he is a part.
No other city in America and only a few cities in the world can make the
showing that New York can.
No city in the world has ever been so minutely described and so thoroughly
illustrated as has New York in this " King's Handbook."
Single copies Two Dollars.
Prices in f|uantities made known on application.
MOS]':S KING, Publisher, Boston, Mass.
^^ Where to Stop."
A GUIDE
TO THE BEST HOTELS OF THE WORLD.
ALPHABETICALLY BY CLTLES.
KV THE EDITOR OF
KING'S HANDBOOK OF THE UNITED STATES. "
"KING'S HANDBOOK OF NEW YORK CITY."
"KING'S HANDBOOK OF BOSTON," Etc., Etc.
1S94-1895.
BOSTON, MASS.
PUBIvISHED BY MOSES KING.
" There is nothing which has yet been contrived by man by which as much
happiness is produced as by a good tavern or inn." — Dr. Samuel Johnson.
The first section of this book con-
tains illustrated announcements and
descriptions of 4.OO interesting and
famous hotels, in almost every country
of the world. Most of these are ac-
companied with pictures of the hotels.
The second section of this book is
made up of a singularly interesting
list of 3000 notable hotels on all the
continents, addingalso the populations
of the cities, from latest censuses, and
other practical notes, including the
rates at the hotels. This is the most
comprehensive, important and valu-
able list of hotels ever made, and will
be of great value to travelers, and of
peculiar attractiveness to others.
'Whoever has traveled life's dull round,
Where'er his stages may have been.
May sigh to think he still has found
The ivarinest •welcome at an inn."
— Shenstone.
PRICE, of this dainty, interesting and useful book, 25 CENTS.
..^" ->■
M
MILLS BUILDING D. 0. MILLS.
BROAD STREET, WALL STREET AND EXCHANGE PLACE.
OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK,
33 WALL STREET.
STATEMEl^JT OCTOBER id, 1894.
RESOURCES.
Loans and Discounts,
Bonds, - - - •
Banking House,
Due from Banks,
Cash and Checks on other
Banks.
$10,873,060.44
141,693.75
- 545,796.92
728.903 52
- 4.206,538.72
$16,495,993.35
LIABILITIES.
Capital Stock. - - $2,000,000.00
Undivided Profits. - - 2.113.234.62
Dividends Unpaid. - - 7,570,38
Deposits:
Individuals. 8,186,965 53
Banks, 4,188.222.82 12.375,188.35
$16,495,993.35
CalHnfj your attention to the above statement, we respectfully solicit accounts of
individuals, firms, banks and other corporations. Depositors offered every
tacility which their balances, business and responsibility warrant.
HORACE E. GARTH, President.
ALEXANDER E. ORR, Vice-President.
GRANVILLE W. GARTH, Cashier.
HENRY R. NRSMITH,
Nesmith & Sdns
DIRECTORS.
HENRY HENTZ,
ALEXANDER E. ORR,
Pkesident Chamber of Commerce.
WILLIAM B. KENDALL,
BiGEi.ow Carpet Co.
CHARLES H. ISHAM.
LOWELL LINCOLN,
Catlin & Co.
IIe.vrv Hentz & Co.
CHARLES M. PRATT,
Standard Oil Co.
HENRY TALMADGE,
Henry Talmadge & Co.
JOHN SINCLAIR,
John Sinclair & Co.
HORACE E. GARTH.
Ul 11 11
m ■■ ■■
II li II
^ 91 SI
;* ^1
ffl
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II
MECHANICS' NATIONAL BANK.
31 AND 33 WALL STREET, SOUTH SIDE. BETWEEN BROAD AND WILLIAM STREETS.
GALLATIN
NATIONAL BANK.
Nos. 3-4 and 36 Wall Street,
GALLATIN BANK BUILDING,
1^Ute;']fs.'ayOfficef NEW YORK CITY.
Capital, ------ Sj', 000,000
Stirplus and Pj'ofits, - - - 1,500,000
OFFICERS:
FRED'K D. TAPPKN, President.
AI^EX. H. STEVENS, Vice-President.
ARTHUR W. SHERMAN, CasJiier.
DIRECTORS;
Frii ;■;<,; it
replaced by th^ present white n.arble building, No. 52 Wall Street, erected under supervision of llcnry I'ai
Joseph Sampson and John Taylor Johnston as Building t'ommittee. It has always been jointly owned and o
pied by the National City Bank and the New York Life Insurance and Trust Company.
'35
The National
City Bank
OF New York.
ORIGINAL CHARTER DATED 1812
CAPITAL, -
SURPLUS,
UNDIVIDED PROFITS,
$i,oco,ooo
1 ,000,000
2,000,000
JAMES STILLMAN, President.
GEORGE I). MEEKER, Cashier.
G. S. Win rSOX, Asst Cashier.
pix*cctc>x*e :
JAMES STILLMAN,
PERCY R. PYNE, CLEVELAND H. DODGE,
HON. SAMUEL SLOAN, WILLIAM ROCKEFELLER,
LAWRENCE TURNURE, H. WALTER WEBB,
ROSEWELL G. ROLSTON, FRANCIS M. BACON,
HENRY A. C. TAYLOR, GEORGE D. MEEKER,
136
NATIONAL CITY BANK OF NEW YORK.
52 WALL STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN FEARL AND WILLIAM STREETS.
GARTER, HAWLEY & GO.
Shipping and Commission Merchants,
54 WaU Street, NEW YORK.
(CENTRAL TRUST BUILDING.)
NETHERLANDS TRADING SOCIETY, of
AMSTERDAM, HOLLAND;
Batavia, Java ;
Singapore, Straits Settlements ;
Paramaribo, Dutch Guiana.
SURINAM BANK, of
AMSTERDAM, HOLLAND;
Paramaribo, Dutch Guiana.
ALSO, CORRESPONDENTS IN
CHINA, JAPAN and EUROPEAN PORTS.
AGENTS FOTi THE
Standard Asphalt Company,
REFINERS OF TRINIDAD ASPHALT.
138
wn ■>■■...
ifftr r i ni pii ra y*r>igia|^^
.::S' :Zs' 2y^i^::^i2S^ CI>''_2il \
'jBinm^Hii
.;!,/-,_ iiiUt,! COMPANY OF iNtvV tu
54 WALL STREET, OPPOSITE THE CUSTOM HOUSE.
JuLirs Steinwender. Charles Stoffregen. Christian Arndt.
Steinwender, Stoffregen & Co.
Coffees
87-8g Wall St, {sout/ru'csf cor. Water St.) New York.
London, E. C, Eng., 29 Mincing Lane.
Rio de Janeiro, 67 Rua Conselheiro Saraiva.
Santos, 67 Rua 25 de Marco.
Chicago, III., 29 Lake Street.
Cincinnati, Ohio, 20-22 West Second St.
St. Louis, Mo., 412-414 South 7th St.
New Orleans, La., 82 Gravier St.
Philadelphia, Pa., io5 So. Front St.
Boston, Mass., 34 Broad Street.
OFFICE AND WAREHOUSE OF DANIEL TALMAGE & CO., If
64-66 WATER STREET.
NEW YORK.
CHARLESTON.
NEW ORLEANS.
DAN TALMAGE'S SONS, established 1841.
Millers and Commission Merchants in Rice.
OFFICE, 115 WALL ST., NEW YORK.
PROPRIETORS COLUMBIA RICE .MILL.
142
DAN TALMAGE'S SONS, RICE MERCHANTS.
No. 115 WALL STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN SOUTH AND FRONT STREETS.
^'mmM- *^** 5^
AMERICAN SUGAR REFINING COMPANY.
OrFICES: WALL STREET, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SOUTH STREET, EAST END OF WALL STREET.
MONTGOMERY
Auction and Commission
COMPANY.
Wholesale Auctioneers,
TEAS, COFFEES
cllld
G
enera
I Gr
oceries.
TEA AUCTION SALES
Every Wedjiesday at 12 d clock noon.
FRANK S. THOMAS, President.
]\[ontgonicry Bnildhig,
Nos. IJ2 and 134. Front Street,
Southwest Corner Pine Street,
NEW YORK CITY.
146
J^.
I i i
S si R
2. 1 jf-*i.
MONTGOMERY BUILDING. OFFICES AND AUCTION HALL.
FRONT STREET. SOUTHWEST CORNER OF PINE STREET.
147
E, R. DURKEE & GO'S
"GAUNTLET BRAND"
UNRIVALLED FOOD PREPARATIONS.
SUPERIORITY ^{%~
1^— OUR STANDARD
DURKEE'S CELERY SALT
Recommends Itself.
DURKEE'S CURRY PO\VDER,
The Best Made.
DURKEE'S SALAD DRESSING,
Convenient, Economical, Delicious.
DURKEE'S CHALLENGE SAUCE,
Nutritious, Appetizing and Beneficial.
DURKEE'S "GAUNTLET" SPICES,
Absolutely Pure and Full Weight.
DURKEE'S "GAUNTLET" MUSTARD,
Unequalled for Excellence of Flavor,
DURKEE'S POULTRY SEASONING,
Without a Rival for Dressings, &c.
DURKEE'S FLAVORING EXTRACTS
Excel all others in Strength and Purity.
These Gocds are carried in Stock by all dealers in
F'irst Class Groceries.
E. R. DURKEE & CO., SPICES, EXTRACTS AND CONDIMENTS.
NOS. 136, 137 AND 739 WATER STREET, CORNER OF PINE STREET.
149
r pMMERClAL & p INANCIAL f llRONICLK.
Investors' Supplement, State and City Supplement,
Street Railway Supplement, Quotation Supplement.
Commercial and Financial CHRONICLE contains 48 to 64 pages,
published every week.
Investors' Supplement of CHRONICLE, a Cyclopedia of facts relating
to Railroad Securities, contains 165 pages, published every other month.
State and City Supplement of CHRONICLE contains 1 84 pages,
issued periodically.
Street Railway Supplement and a Quotation Supplement are to be
issued early in i8g5; these are to be given to the Chronicle subscribers with-
out charge, in the same manner as the Supplements above named already are.
The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is a weekly newspaper of 48 to
64 pag^es, published every Saturday morning and mailed to subscribers by the earliest morn-
ing mail. The Chronicle has the following distinguishing characteristics:
Editorials on Financial, Banking and Economic subjects; Stock and Bond Prices ;
Railroad Earnings given by weeks and months, with comments; Railroad and Investment
news ; the State and City Department, which embraces an exhibit of the debts and finances
of leading States, cities, counties and towns, and also current news as to city and State
finances, new loans, proposals for bonds, etc., etc.
The Investors' Supplement contains 165 pages and is issued quarterly, and
IS furnished, ?(>/'//;(;«/ cJiarge, to all j-cgular stibscribers of the Chronicle, and no single
copies are sold. This Supplement contains an exhibit of the stocks and bonds of railroads
and miscellaneous companies, showing amounts outstanding, dates of maturity, interest and
dividend periods, latest dividends paid, etc., etc., together with remarks upon the organiza-
tion of the companies, their earnings, net income, financial status, etc. Also a large number
of clear and distinct railroad maps, showing tlie location of each important road or system
by itself. At the end of the remarks on each company are indexed the pages of the Chron-
icle volumes where the annual report and all current items of information have been
published within a year past.
The State and City Supplement contains over 180 pages of clearly printed
tables and reading m.ilter, and is issued in April, with other editionsduiing the year when
found desirable. This elaborate publication contains details of State, city, county and town
debts, with remarks upon the principal facts touching the financial status of each municipal-
ity, the sinking funds, assessed valuations, population, etc., etc. Also a valuable digest of
the limitations placed by law on the issue of State and municipal debts, the statutory pro-
visions as to investments by savings banks, etc., etc. This Sipplement \^ furnished free to
all yearly subscribers of the Chronicle, and no single copies are sold under any
circumstances.
SUBSCRIPTION, including ALL SUPPLEMENTS, Si 0.00 per year.
EUROPE.AN SUBSCRIPTION (which covers^ „,^„^
postage) \ S12.00per year.
File Covers, called for at office, 50 cents ; sent by mail 68 cents. Vol-
umes, sent to office, bound for %\.
WILLIAIVI B. DANA COMPANY,
Pine Street, cor. Pearl Street, New York.
K. M. MoNTGOMERv. Harris B. Fisher.
Richard M. Montgomery
REAL ESTATE
Agent,
Broker and Auctioneer.
A Specialty of
DOWN TOWN REAL ESTATE.
Complete Management of
PROPERTIES AND ESTATES.
Appraisements of
BUILDINGS AND LANDS.
Agents for the
TONTINE BUILDING, Wall Street, northwest corner of
Water Street.
MONTGOMERV BUILDING, Front Street, southwest
corner of Pine Street.
AMSINCK BUILDING, Hanover, Pearl and Beaver Streets.
RICHARD M. MONTGOMERY,
Nos. 59 AND 6 1 PINE STREET,
Between WILLIAM and PEARL STS.,
NEW YORK CITY.
TEXT versus NO TEXT.
THIS and ANOTHER.
THIS BOOK, "King's Photographic Views of New York,"
has no descriptive text, but
ANOTHER BOOK, 'King's Handbook of New York Citv,"
has 1008 pages of carefully prepared text, minutely describ-
ing the whole city, bringing before the reader, in words and
pictures, the story of the great Metropolis.
IF THIS BOOK pleases you by reason of its pictures,
THEN THE OTHER BOOK will also please you, for in
"King's Handbook "you get 1029 illustrations, besides its
1008 pages of text.
YOU SEE THIS BOOK is worthy of a life long preservation,
for its pictures of to-day become of great value as the
never-ceasing changes are taking place, and yet it is of no
such value as "King's Handbook."
NOW SEND FOR THE OTHER, for when you see it you
will never part with it for anything like its cost. It is
worth its cost at a single evening's entertainment, when you
are alone or when you have company to entertain. It has
a great value for the present and a still greater value for
the future.
Two Dollars a Copv.
MOSES KING. Publisher,
BOSTON, MASS.
ri^ t
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J'n iirf i:t ff? -1 _- " '
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GEO. R. RE4D, REAL ESTATE AGENT. DOWN-TOWN CLUB.
THE WALLACE BUILDING.
56 AND 58 PINE STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN WILLIAM AND PEARL STREETS. EXTENDs'tHROUGH TO 26 AND 28 CEDAR.
ISS
dlammercial llnioii
s
gintitct* of goiibouj
Cor. pine and WILLIAM STREETS. NEW YORK.
United States Branch Statemento
JANUARY 1st, 1894.
Total Assets in the United States,
^3,555,199.56
Reserved for unexpired Risks, - - - #2,119,619.73
Outstanding Losses, ------- 425,529.32
All other Liabilities, ------- 71,167.40
Net Surplus, ------ 938,883.11
Total Assets, ----- $3,555,199-56
DIRECTORS IN NEW YORK:
Wm. Au,en Butler, Geo. S. Bowdoin,
S. Van RenSvSELaer Cruger,
Eugene Dutilh, Alfred Pell.
John T. Terry, David A. Wells.
CHARLES SEWALL, ALEX. H. WRAY,
Manager. Assistant Manager.
156
^^b.
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1 P
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y^
COMMERCIAL UNION ASSURANCE CO., LIMITED, OF LONDON, ENGLAND.
.COMMERCIAL UNION BUILDING, WILLIAM STREET, NORTHWEST CORNER OF PINE STREET.
Established 1809.
Incorpurated by Royal Charter.
- North British and -
Mercantile Insurance Co.
OF LONDON AND EDINBURGH.
United States Branch, 54 William St.
NEW YORK.
New York Board of Management.
SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esq., Chairman (R. d. Morgan & Co)
CHAS. H. COSTER, Esq. CHAS. EZRA WHITE, Esq.
(Drexel, Morgan & Co.)
DAVID DOWS, Jr., Esq. Hon. WM. WALDORF ASTOR.
JACOB WENDELL, Esq. GEO. C. RAND, Esq.
(Jacob Wendell & Co.) (Hard & Rand).
GEO. W. GROSSMAN, Esq. (W. H. Crossman & Bro.)
HENRY E. BOWERS, Manager.
DAN. WINSLOW, Ass't Manager.
Western Department,
ROOKERY BUILDING, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
W. J. LITTLEJOHN, J. C. GRIFFITHS,
Manager. Associate Manager.
Pacific Department,
212 PINE STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
TOM C. GRANT, General Agent.
158
^i^^
-«li^
II ,
^^&iSj
I w^
NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE INSURANCE CO. OF LONDON AND EDINBURGH.
No. 54 WILLIAM STREET, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF PINE STREET.
THE
Liverpool and London and (ilobe
Insurance Company.
:Ne\v York Office, - 45 William Street,
LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND GLOBE BUILDING.
STATEMENT U. S. BRANCH.
JANUARY 1, 1894.
Real Estate, ill, 603,270.00
Loans on Bond and Mortgage in New York City, . 3,039,371.14
Loans on Bond and Mortgage oatsidc New York City, 39,9.57.50
IT. S. Government 4'=/o Bonds, 1,779,750.00
State and City Bonds, 265,5.50.00
Ciish in. Banks, . . , 831,139.89
I'reniiiinis in course of collection, ..... 903,804.76
Other admitted Assets, ....... 75,307.99
$8,598,271.28
Unearned Premi-inns, .... $4,153,028.69
Unadjusted Losses, ..... 740,517.05
Perpetnal Policy Liability, . . . 329,622.03
All other Liabilities, .... 347,978.72
SURPLUS, $3,026,524.79
$8,598,271.28
The amount paid in satisfaction of fire losses in ihe United
States in the course of forty-six years is
$59,893,504.76
UNITED STATES TRUSTEES IN NEW YORK :
CHARLES H. MAR.SHALL, Chairman. | J. E. PULSFORD.
JOHN A. STEWART. i JOHN CROSBY BROWN.
T(esidcut SVrjiiJgvr for the United Shiles, Deputy {Maimgcr,
HENRY W. EATON. GEORGE Ml. HOYT.
LIVERPOOL & LONDON & GLOBE INSURANCE CO.
LIVERPOOL i LONDON & GLOBE BUILDING. Nns,4b AND 47 WILLIAM STREET AND Nos 47 AND 4a PINE STREET.
jr IS ADMITTED THAT
The Fidelity and Casualty Co.
OF UiHlV YORK
Issues the niosf hbe nil policy of
ACCIDENT INSURANCE
ill the zuorld. It covers foi^ Intentional
Injuries injlicted by others, and. for ^2
Weeks Indenimty.
$ J 0,0 00 under our Jiezu Conibination
Form, until $1 50 Weekly Indemnity
costs $j ^ a year, 01 $10,000 icith $^0
Weekly Indemnity costs $2§ a year.
Scud for sample policy and application to
E. E.. CLAPP. Manager,
No., /i PINE STREET,
Accident Department. NEW YORK.
For New Yor/,\ Ak7u ferscy.
Ala ssac/ut setts a?id Rhode /si a /id.
FIDELITY AND CASUALTY CO. OF NEW YORK. E. E. CLAPP, MANAGER ACCIDENT DEP'T.
Nil 45 PINE STREET, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF WILLIAM STREET.
163
The Imperial Insurance Co. Limited, of London
The Imperial Insurance Compan}', Limited, of London, England, is one
of those old and staunch foreign corporations which have become an absolute
necessity for the protection of losses against fire in this country. The Im-
perial is over ninety years old, having been instituted in 1803. It is. with a sin-
gle exception, the largest purely fire-insurance company in Great Britain ; and,
without any exception, it has the largest net surplus of any English insurance
company doing a fire business. At home it is esteemed as one of the strongest
and most successful of the insurance corporations. In this country, since its
establishment in 1868, when it opened its office in New York, it has made a
record which places the LTniled States branch on an equal footing with the
best American companies. In this country its gross assets are $1,847,271,
which includes the reserve of $905,078 for unearned premiums, $£41,931 for
unsettled losses, and $37,458 for all other claims, leaving a net surplus in the
United States of $762,804. It has paid the colossal sum of $65,oco,ooo fcr
losses.
The General Manager of the company is Edward ("ozens-Sniith, who has
liccn at the head of the company's affairs for over twenty years. The
managers of the Metropolitan District are J. J. Courtney and John R.
McCay, a firm composed of two experienced and energetic underwriters.
Mr. Courtney has been connected with the Imperial for twenty-nine years,
eighteen of which were spent at the company's head-offices in London. Mr.
McCay has been the representative of the Phcenix Insurance Company of
Martford for twenty years.
Besides having the management of the Metropolitan Distiict for the
Imperial they are also managers of the New England and Middle States
department of this company. The}^ also have the management for the
Metropolitan District of the old Phoenix of Llarlford, one of the staunchest of
the American insurance companies, and also of the Lion Insurance Company
of England, another of the great English fire corporations. Their offices are
in the Imperial Building, at 3r and 33 Pine Street, a six-story, marble-front
office-building owned by the Imperial Insurance Company, and well situated
in what is regarded now as the insurance district. Th.e trustees of the
Imperial in the LTnited States are Henry W. Cannon, President of the Chase
National Bank; W. A. Read of the Banking House of Vermilye & Co., and
R. L. Edwards, President of the Bank of the State of New York.
The Imperial has, besides those mentioned above, the following depart-
ments, viz.: Boston, John C. Paige, Manager; Chicago, Daniel C. Osmun,
Manager; Atlanta, J. T. Dargan, Manager; San Francisco, W. J. Landers,
Manager, and representatives in every nook and corner of the United StPtes,
and throughout the civilized world.
X ^:,
^..
. <*/: •
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[^^^^n
IMPERIAL INSURANCE COMPANY, LIMITED, OF LONDON, ENGLAND.
IMPERIAL INSURANCE BUILDING. Nos 33 AND 35 PINE STREET, BETWEEN NASSAU AND WILLIAM STREETS.
165
The Northern Assurance Co.
OF LONDON, ENGLAND.
[A Sketch from "King's Handbouk of New York."]
The Northern Assurance Company, of London, England, whose
principal United-States office is at 38 Pine Street, New York, was organized
in 1836, and commenced business the same year. Its head-offices are in
London, England, and in Aberdeen, Scotland. One of the largest and
strongest among the older British companies, it does business in all the
civilized portions of the world, and is noted for its careful and successful
management. The marvellous growth of the company appears in the record
of its fire-premiums, which were $4,500, in 1836 ; $14,500, in 1840 ; $19,000, in
1845; $40,000, in 1850; $276,500, in 1855; $607,000, in i860; $820,000, in 1865;
$1,068,000, in 1870; 11,756,500, in 1875; $2,223,000, in 1880; $2,886,500, in
1885 ; and $3,581,534, in 1893. In Great Britain the company does a fire and
life-insurance business. In the United States its business is restricted to fire-
insurance only. lis United-States assets, December 31, 1893, were $1,657,090;
unpaid losses, unearned premiums, and all actual and contingent liabilities,
$1,216,618. The company has, specially deposited with the Insurance
Departments of the several States, and with trustees in New York, securities
to the value of $1,350,404, none of which it may withdraw or remove while it
has any existing liability in the United States. Since its organization the
company has received in nre-premiums alone, $68,078,200 ; and paid in fire-
losses alone, $40,255,246. It is represented in nearly all the States, cities,
principal towns and villages of the United States and Canada. Its territory in
the United States is divided into four departments: The New-York, Middle-
States and Southern Department, the head-office of which is at 38 Pine Street.
New York, and the Manager, George W. Babb, Jr.; the New-England
Department, the head-office of which is at 27 Kilby Street, Boston, and the
Manager, Howard S. Wheelock ; the Western Department, the head-office of
which is in Monadnock Block, Chicago, and the Manager, G. H. Lermit ; and
the Pacific-Coast Department, the head-office of which is in San Francisco, and
the Manager, George F. Grant. The growth of the company has been steady
and uninterrupted. It has established a fire fund co-extensive with its net
surplus, to meet extraordinary conflagrations. No conflagration which can be
considered possible could retard for a single hour the operations of the
Northern Assurance Company. Its accommodations to its policy-holders, and
its equitable and prompt adjustment of losses, have made it popular with its
customers and agents. Its vast resources furnish certain indemnity. The cut
on opposite page represents the Northern's graceful stone building, in New
York, completed in 1889, and entirely occupied for its own use. It is at the
heart of the "insurance district."
NORTHERN ASSURANCE COMPANY OF LONDON, ENGLAND.
NORTHERN ASSURANCE BUILDING. No. 38 PINE STREET, BETWEEN WILLIAM AND NASSAU STREETS.
167
OROAXIZED 1852.
)
Hanover
Fire Insurance
Company,
A^. 34 Pine Street, - - NEW YORK
HAS AGENCIES ESTABLISHED IN ALL
PRINCIPAL CITIES AND TOWNS OF
THE UNITED STATES.
I. REMSEN LANE, - President.
Howard P. Gray, - - - Vice-President.
Charles L. Roe, ----- Secretary.
Charles A. Shaw, - - Assistant Secretary.
Joseph McCord, - - - Assistant Secretary.
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HANOVER FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
HANOVER FIRE BUILDING, No. 34 PINE STREET, BETWEEN NASSAU AND WILLIAM STREETS.
169
DE LEMOS S. CORDES
N. Gulping, real estate agen
THE LOEB BUILDING.
NOS- 27 AND 29 PINE STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN NASSAU AND WILLIAM STREETS.
The Lancashire
Insurance Co.
OF MANCHESTER, ENGLAND
ASSETS IN AMERICA
ist of Jan., 1894, $2,287,776.03
LIABILITIES.
Unpaid Losses, $363,161.65
Re-insur. Reserve, 1,258,733.66
All other Liabilities, 40,000.00
Net Surplus, 625,880.72
GENERAL MANAGER
DIGBY JOHNSON, - - Manchester, England
TRUSTEES IN THE UNITED STATES:
DONALD MACKAY, . of Vermilye & Co., Bankers.
CORNELIUS N BLISS, . of Bliss, Fabyaii & Co., Dry Goods.
H. J. KAIRCHILD, . of H. B. Claflin Co., DrvGoods.
NEW YORK OFFICE
Lancashire Building, No. 25 Pine St.
EDWARD LITCHFIELD, Manager.
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LANCASHIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF MANCHESTER, ENGLAND.
LANCASHIRE BUILDING, No. 25 PINE STREET, ADJOINING UNITED STATES SUB-TREASURY.
Vermilye & Co.
Bankers
Nassau and Pine Sts.
NEW YORK CITY
Dealers in Investment Securities
k — *%v^
ORGyVNIZKD 1851.
The HANOVER
NA TIONAL BANK
0f tl]e dity of riem jjork,
HANOVER BANK BUILDING,
KASSAIT AXI) PINK STRKETS,
(SOUTHWEST CORNER.)
Capital, ---_-- $i,ooo,oco
Surplus, ------- 1 ,900,000
Deposits exceed ----- 20,000,000
JAIVIES T. WOODWARD, President.
MITCHELL N. PACKARD, Vice-President.
JAMES M. DONALD, Vice-President.
WILLIAM HALLS, Jr., Cashier.
DIR ECTOHS.
JAMES T. WOODWARD, President,
VERNON H. BROWN,
Of Vernon H. Brown & Co., Agents Cunard Steamship Line, 4 Bovvlinj^ Green.
SIGOURNEY W. FAY,
Of Wendell, Fay & Co., Dry Goods Commission (Woolens), S2 and 84 Worth Street.
MARTIN S. FECHMEIMER,
Of Fechheimer, Fishel & Company, Wholesale Clothing, 748 Broadway, N. V.
MITCHELL N. PACKARD,
Of Packard, Thomas & Co., Importers of Coffees, Teas and Spices, 171 Duane Street.
WILLIAM ROCKEFELLER,
President Standard Oil Co., of New York, 26 Broadway.
JAMES STILLMAN,
Of Woodward & "Stillman, Merchants, i6 to 22 William Street.
ELIJAH P. SMITH,
Of Woodward, Baldwin & Co., Dry Goods Commission (Cottons), 4; Worth Street.
ISIDOR STRAUS,
of L. .Straws & Sons, Importers of China & Glassware, 44 Warren Street.
JAMES M. DONALD, Vice-President.
WILLIAM HALLS, Jr., C.\SHIKR.
S. SUE-TReASURY,
HANOVER BANK.
THE HANOVER NATIONAL BANK.
HANOVER BANK BUILDING^ NASSAU AND PINE STREETS, OPPOSITE U. S. SUE-TREASURY.
MARTYRS' MONUMENT.
177
A IVIARVKL OK ROOKNlAKlNG.
KING'S
HAINDBOOK OF
The United States.
51 COLORED MAPS. 940 SOLID PAGES.
2639 ILLUSTRATIONS.
Text by M. F. SWEETSER. Edited by MOSES KING.
THIS grand work touches high-water mark in its scores of maps, its hun-
dreds of pages, its thousands of pictures ; and all of an excellence so rare
and at a price so low as to astonish and delight everyone. Its issue marks
an Era in Bookmaking. You have never seen a work at all like it. You may
have seen works somewhat like parts of this ; but this is the WHOLE ! It
is the only book in existence which tells what our great country is to-day.
Indeed, its title might well be —
Our Country! Its Founding, Growth and Glory!
Tlie Chapter on each State and Territory was either written or revised by Au-
thorities, men most prominent in governmental or educational affairs. Every-
thing was prepared with the greatest care. It has the hearty endorsements of
the chief men of evcrr State and Territory. It is full, from cover to cover, of
interest and information. Every one of its 940 pages teems with glowing facts
about our wonderful land. It is at one time and under one cover —
A HISTORY of the Discovery, Settlement, Growth and Present Grandeur
of every Commonwealth. Crisp and cliarming.
AN ATLAS. Geographic gems of every State and Territory. Unsur-
passed in accuracy and beauty.
AN ALBUM. Over 2600 Pearls of Pictures! The Art of Printing at
this time permits no finer presswork.
A CYCLOPEDIA of Government, Population, Finance, Manufactures,
Education, Climate — just what, and only what, you really iwed to know.
A REFERENCE WORK, A marvel of System and Condensation.
Arranged Alphal>etically and also Double Indexed.
KING'S HANDBOOK OF THE UNITED STATES" suIscr'Tpt^on
PRICE, .S3.00. IN CLOTH BINDING.
MOSES KING, Publisher, BOSTON, MASS.
178
PINE STREET, NORTH SIDE, FROM NASSAU STREET TO BROADWAY.
SHOWING THE CLEARING HOUSE AND EQUITABLE LIKE BUILDING.
SURETY ON BONDS
BANK OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYEES,
Treasurers of Corporations, and others, who are
required to give Bonds in their positions of
trust, and who desire to avoid aslcing friends to
become their sureties, or who may wish to
relieve friends from further obligations as bonds-
men, should apply in person or by letter to the
AMERICAN SURETY COMPANY,
No. 160 Broadway, New York.
The Largest Surety Company in the World.
Capital, ^2,000,000.00.
W. L. TRENHOLM,
President.
HENRY D. LYMAN,
Vice-President.
Statement Dec. 30, 1893.
Resources - 53,368,883.59
Including Capital, 32,000,000.00
Liabilities - - 5557,253.62
Including Reserve of §388,41 6.06
being 50 per rent, of premium
receipts on Bonds in force,
as required by
Law.
The only Company incorporated in the
United States devoted exclusively to
issuing Bonds for Officers and Employees
in positions of Trust, guaranteeing Con-
tracts and Bonds and Undertakings in
Judicial proceedings. Undertakings
issued in cases of Appeal, Replevin,
Security for Costs, etc.
PRINCIPAL BRANCHES, UNITED STATES AND CANADA.
DANIEL T. HUNT, Manager. Tacoma Building.
GEO. W. MANNING. Manager, Turner Building,
HENRY K. FOX, Attorney, Bullitt Building,
ALEX. DIXON, Manager. 22 Toronto Street, .
OBRION & RUSSELL, 108 Water Street, .
JAMES E. STEVENSON, Agent, 121-123 Fourth Avenue,
W. T. SHACKELFORD. Agent, 19 South Holllday Street, .
JOHN S. J. MILLER. Agent, Equitable Building,
S. P. CHILD, Agent and Inspector, N. Y. Life Building, .
GEO. L. SEYBOLT, Agent and Inspector, 331 Pine Street,
SAN
CHICAGO
. ST. LOUIS
PHILADELPHIA
TORONTO
BOSTON
PITTSBURGH
BALTIMORE
DENVER
ST. PAUL
FRANCISCO, CAL.
Pamphlets Furnished upon Application.
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AMERICAN SURETY COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
BROADWAY, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF PINE STREET.
KouNTZE Brothers
BANKERS
1 20 Broadway Equitable Building
New York
Transact a general banking business.
Receive deposits, subject to check, and allow interest
on balances.
Make advances aijainst available collateral.
Buy and sell, on commission, Government Bonds and
other securities.
Make cable and telegraphic transfers throughout Europe
and the United States.
Draw Exchange on Great Britain, Ireland and the
Continent.
Issue LETTERS OF CREDIT for travelers, available
in all j)arts of the world.
Correspondence Invited
THE EQUITABLE LIFE BUILDING.
BROADWAY, EAST SIDE, FROM PINE TO CEDAR STREET. VIEW LOOKING NORTH ON BRDADWAY.
German American
Insurance Co,
OF NEW YORK
Offices: 1 15 Broadway
Agencies throughout the United States
Reserve for Insurance in Force, . . $2,797,505.54
Reserve for Losses, 506,307 48
Reserve for all other Claims, . . . 79,910.52
Capital Stock, .... 1,000,000.00
Siii'ithis Intfond all JLiabllities, 1,8^j6,,37'^.20
Total Assets, . . . $0,240,008.83
184
GERMAN AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
Nos. 115 AND 117 BROADWAY, BETWEEN THAMES AND CEDAR STREETS.
American
Bank Note Compan)
78 TO SG TRINITY PLACE, NEW YORK.
J
Business Founded 1795. Incorporated under Laws of State of New York, 1858.
Reorganized, 1879.
ENGRAVERS AND PRINTERS
of
BONDS AND STOCK CERTIFICATES,
And all other documents requiring security. Bank Notes, Bonds, Postage and Revenue
Stamps for Foreign Governments, Drafts, Checks, Bills of
Exchange, Letter Heads, etc.
E^GKAVING ABJD miNXI^iG executed in the finest and most artistic
style from steel plates, with special safeguards to prevent counterfeiting. Special
pspsrs m-jnufactured exclusively for use of the Company.
SAFETY COEORS. SAFETY' PAPERS. Work execut3d in tire-proof
buildings.
RAIEWAV PRIPJTIIMG OF AEE DESCRIPTION'S. Railway
Tickets, Maps, Folders and Illuminated Show Cards, of the most approved styles.
Numbered, Loca' and Coupon Tickets, of any Size, Pattern, Style or Device, with
Steel Plato Tints.
EITHOGR.4.PHIC APUD TVPE PRINTING. Show Cards, Labels,
Calendars.
BI^APiiK BOOKS OF EVERY DESCRIPTIOI»J.
James Macdonough, President. Theo. H. Fkekland, Sec'y and Treas.
Aug. D. Shepard, j ,r- „ ,, • , , .Tno. E. Currier, Ass't Secretary.
TouKO Robertson, f ^"^*^"^'^'^'^"''^"'*- J. K. Myers, Ass't Treasurer.
1'. C. LouNSBURV, J. B. Ford, I^oiit. N. Toppan,
Jos. S. Stout, W. J. Arkell, Felix Campbell,
K. (". Converse.
186
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AMERICAN BANK NOTE COMPANY.
TRINITY PLACE, WEST SIDE, BETvVEEN THAMES AND RECTOR STREETS.
.87
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BUILDERS
Muway TABERNACLE
' ^T uEuRGES CLERGr HOH'
*; 5T VINCENTS HOSPITAL
*■ ISABELLA HEIMATH
t LANCASHIRE INSURANCE CO
'. EAGLE INSURANCE CO
GALUTIN NATIONAL BAWK
■ SEAMEN S SAVINGS BANK
- EDEN MUSEE
' STEINWAY HALL
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THE WESTERN bLtoiri,^ BUILLjIMj.
GREENWICH STREET, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF THAMES STREET.
189
The Fidelitv and Casualty Co.
OF NEW YORK.
C^HOROH F. SKWARD, President.
PRINCIPAL OFFICE:
Fidelity and Casualty Building, Cedar, Church and Temple Sts.
THE PIONEER COMPANY IN ITS FIELD.
Bouds of Suretyship,
Personal Accident, Employers' Liability, Steam Boiler,
Plate Glass, Burglary.
THIS COMPANY has been engaged in the several iiiiiior lliiscellaueous
lilies of insurance for nearly twonty years, and has built up, gradually
and prudently, the largest general Casualty Insurance business in tlie world.
Its annual income from premiums is nearly t^vo and a half millions of dollars.
Its business is protected by assets of over two millions, including an unearn-
ed premium reserve of oue million t>VO hundred thousand dollars, and a
special reserve against contingent claims ol one-third of a million. It has
paid five millions to its policyholders for losses. Its constant efToit is to give
not only insurance indemnity, but prompt and effective inspection and
adjusting' service to its clients.
DIRHCXORS:
GEO S. COE, J. ROGERS MAXWELL. ALEXANDER E. ORR.
WM, P. DIXON, GEO. F. SEWARD. JOHN L. RIKER,
A.B.HULL, J. G. McCULLOUGH, J. S. T. STRANAHAN,
H. A. HURLBUT. J. H. MILLARD, GEO. G. WILLIAMS,
W. G. LOW, THOS. S. MOORE.
ROBT. J. HILLAS, Treasurer-Secretary.
INgUIRIES ADDRESSED TO THIS OFFICE RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION.
Agencies have been Established in all Considerable Towns.
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FIDELITY AND CASUALTY COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
CEDAR STREET, NORTH SIDE, FROM TEMPLE TO CHURCH STREET,
ORGANIZED A. D. 1350.
Niaoara Fire Insurance Co.
NEW YORK CITY.
Hi\id Offices:
Niairara Insurance Building, - 135 and 137 BROADWAY.
Nlirthwest Corner Cedar Street.
AGENCIES THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES.
THOMAS F. GOODRICH, President.
HAROLD HERRICK. Vice-President. WEST POLLOCK. Assistant Secretary.
GEO. C. HOWE, Secretary.
JAMES R. TAYLOR, Late of Taylor, Olm-
stead & Co.
JAMES W. ELWELL, Firm of James W.
Elwell & Co.
THOMAS G. RITCH, Stamford, Conn.,
Firm of Arnoux, Ritch & Woodford.
THOS. F. GOODRICH, Pres., 135 Broad-
way.
AUSTIN CORBIN, Pres. L. T. Railroad.
CHAS. B. FARWEI.L, of J. V. Farwell &
Co., Chicago, 111.
DUMONT CLARKE, President American
E.xchange National Rank.
HORACE S. ELY, 64 Cedar Street.
niREC'lORS:
ROBERT W. De FOREST, of De Forest
Brothers.
EDVVIX A. ST EVENS, Pres. Hoboken Lan.i
and Improvement and Hoboken Ferry Co's,
Hobiken.
OTTO T. BANNARD, Pres. Continental
Trust Co., New York.
WM. E. BOND, 2 Wall Street.
HENRY W. De FOREST, of De Forest
Brothers.
J. WARREN GREENE, of Arnold, Greene
& Patterson.
HAROLD HERRICK, V. -Pres. ,13s Broad-
way.
NIAGARA FIKE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
IIAGARA FIRE BUILDING, Nos. 135 AND 137 BROADWAY, NORTHWEST CORNER OF CEDAR STREET.
C. C. HINE,
Piiblfelier, 137 Broadwai), New York,
INSURANCE PUBLICATIONS, insurance Supplies,
Insurance Blanks, Insurance Printing of all
sorts. Estimates furnished for company sup-
plies or other work, on shortest notice.
THE INSURANCE MONITOR. The oldest Ameri-
can insurance journal and the best. Filled
monthly with the discussion of insurance topics,
insurance news, etc. SulDscription price, $3,00
per annum.
THE INSURANCE LAW JOURNAL. Twenty-three
completed volumes. A complete library of in-
surance law. Published in monthly parts. Sub-
scription price, $6.00 per annum; single num-
bers, 50 cents.
INSURANCE BOOKS. All the insurance works of
the day on sale. Send for a catalogue.
C. C. HINE,
Insurance Publisher, 137 Broadway, New York.
C. C. HINE, PUBLISHER INSURANCE MONITOR."
Nos. 137 AND 139 BROADWAY, BETWEEN CEDAR AND LIBERTY STREETS.
J
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f^Uj^ '<^'^.J^l(/l€Ml'a€' ^VW-^/
Wm. J. Vale )iti lie
Amos F. Eiw
fohn D. Jones
Edward A. Walton
DIRECTORS
De Witt C. Hays
Edward Kiiii^
George H. Me Lean
George E. Baker
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1' -,-_-,---■-_---, -----i .------ -^Wl \
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The Gemania
ORGANIZED 1860.
Life Insurance Company
^B
OF NEW YORK.
PRINCIPAL
OFFICE:
20-26 Nassau Street New York
European Branch oTfice:
12 LEIPZIGER PLATZ, BERLIN, GERMANY.
ALL POLICIES ARE
NON-FORFEITABLE, INCONTESTABLE,
FREE FROM RESTRICTIONS.
Claims by Death always Payable in Full and Without Delay.
B I; Payments to Policy Holders since Orfjan-
ization 32 Millions of Dollars.
Assets, January ist, 1895 20 Millions of Dollars.
Surplus, 4 per cent, standard 1% Millions of Dollars.
Insurance in force 70 Millions of Dollars.
Annual Cash Income 4 Millions of Dollars.
INSURANCE AND INVESTMENT COMBINED IN THE COMPANY'S
DIVIDEND TONTINE POLICY.
HUGO WESENDONCK, President.
CORNELIUS DOREMUS, Vice-President. HUBERT CILLIS, Secretary and Actuary.
MAX A. WESENDONCK, Special Director. GUSTAV MEIDT, Assistant Secretary.
CHARLES BERNACKI, M.D„ Medical Director.
THE GERMANIA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
NASSAU STREET, EAST SIDE,' BETWEEN CEDAR AND PINE STREETS.
KIRK INSURANCE.
New York
X \ yV ESTABLISHED 1864. * ^ i J
ALEXANDER STODDART, Gen'l Agt.
ISSUING AN
Underwriters Policy
SECURED BY
EIGMT MIJLL-IOIM DOl-1-ARS-
THE UNDERWRri'ERS AGENCY has a record
of thirty years of honorable dealing with the insuring
public, and now offers stronger indemnity than ever.
THE UXDERWREFERS POLICY (fire) is issued
by local agents throughout the United States of
America.
Head Office: 46 Cedar St., IMcw York
206
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NEW YORK UNDERWRITERS' AGENCY.
HEAD offices: continental building, 46 CEDAR STREET.
207
PLATE GLI18S
LLOYDS FLUTE KLflSS IHSOBHUCE GO. of hew ^k.
HOME OFFICE, WILLIAM and CEDAR STS.
CASH CAPITAL, $250,000.
$100,000 in U. S. Bonds deposited with the Insurance Department
of the State of New York for the security of Policy Holders.
Largest Assets, Largest Income and Largest Reserve
of any Plate Glass Insurance Company in the WORLD.
W. T. WOODS, PRESIDENT.
D. B. HALSTEAD, VICC-PRESl DE NT. C. E. W. CHAMBERS, SECRETARY.
WILLIAM T. WOODS, . President.
RALPH C.1AKLEY Of Oudiii & Oakley, 45 Broadway, New York.
JOHN H. SHED Wool Importer, 83 Reade Street, New York.
DANIHL B. HALSTEAD President New York National Exchange Bank, New York.
L SHERWOOD COFFIN Of Coffin, Redingtou & Co.. 72 lohn Street, New York.
GEORGE M. OLCOTT Of Dodge ,& Olcott. Importers, 86 William Street, New York.
SAMUEL A. WARNER Arctiitect, 132 Broadway, New York.
STURGIS COFFIN Of Ladd & Coffin, 24 Barclay Street, New York.
WILLIAM D. CHASE, . . Of Ch.ise, Roberts & Co., 173 North Ninth Street, Brooklyn, New York.
WILLIAM A. NASH President Cum Exchange Bank, New York.
FREDERICK A. GUILD, 55 l„hn Street, New York.
HENRY B. HALL, 22 Park Place. New York.
WILBUR L. MOLYNEAUX, . Of Geo. H. Smith & Hicks, Marine Managers. Home Insurance Co.,
68 William Street, New York.
LLOYDS PLATE GLASS INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
WILLIAM STREET, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF CEDAR STREET.
GERMANIA
fire; INSUHiYNCE CO.
NKVV YORIv.
OFFICE:
62 and 64 W)illiam gtreet,
::.
CORNER CEDAR.
STATEMENT,
JANUARY
1, 1894.
Cash Ca
pital,
-
-
$1,000,000.
,00
Reserve
for Unearned Premiums,
-
- 1,098,152.
93
Reserve
for Losses under adji
istment.
-
1 1 5,552.
■49
Reserve
for all other Claims,
-
- . - 32,945.
96
Net Sur]
plus.
-
960,332.
83
Total Assets,
HUGO SCH
$3,206,984
JN, President.
.21
UMA^
FR. VON BERNUTH,
CHAS.
RUYKHAVER,
/ 'ice-Preside7it.
Seeretc.
iry.
GEO. B
. EDWARDS,
(iUSTAV KEHR,
2d I 'he-President.
Assistant Secreta
:ry.
WESTERN DEPARTMENT:
Chicago, III. : E. G. HALLE, Manager.
PACIFIC COAST DEPARTMENT:
San Francisco, c:al. : CESAR BERTHEAU, Manager.
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GERMANIA FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
GERMANIA FIRE BUILDING, WILLIAM STREET, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF CEDAR STREET.
A Rcmdrl-al'lc Worh fhai: Has Met with- Rare Sxicccss.
Kings Handbook of New York City.
A FEW OPINIONS.
" Mr. Moses King deserves the undying gratitude
of the citizens of New York, and in fact of all persons
who are interested in the prosperity of the great
metropolis of the United States." — Illustrated Lon-
don News^ I.ondon, England.
"It is without a rival."— 77;c Evening Post, New
York.
'It keeps pace with the march of improvement
even in busy New York." — Public Ledger, Philadel-
phia.
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Enquirer, Buffalo.
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as on its author and publisher." — Enquirer, Cincin-
nati.
"Illustrated with a thousand reproductions of
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mechanical features are irreproachable. The thor-
oughness of the information, the multiplicity of facts
and figures, not easily accessible elsewhere, and
the order and minute accuracy displayed in the edit-
ing may well amaze one.'* — Chicago Herald,Chica^o,
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of America."— Paintin!,r and Decorating: Philadel-
phia.
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which occupied fully two hours. We need hardly
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York.
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many well known vin\.ers."—Jl'atchman, Boston.
" As we advise every man to read up on physi-
ology and ' know thyself,' so we may even say to the
resident of New York, buy King's Handbook and
know thy city." — Dr. Footers Health Monthly, New
York.
"The historical chapter, containing, as it does,
reproductions of early maps and surveys, is in itself
worth the px\ce:''— Business, New York
■' Lifted above the level of the directory or guide
book into the literary region without in any degree
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" This is a remarkable and exhaustive account of
the great metropolis. It gives a history of the past
and IS a minute guide book to the present city, hav-
ing over one thousand illustrations taken from pho-
tographs made expressly for this work. No object
of interest is passed by. It is a wonderful book, as
the growth of the city "is itself a marvel.'' — Charles-
ton (S. C.) .Vi'7r.r, South Carolina.
Col. Robert G. In^ersoll says ;
•' Your Handbook of New York is the best I ever
saw of its kind. It is good enough for anybody and
cheap enough for everybody. Every New Yorker
ought to have a copy.''
Oliver Wendell Holmes says :
" Your remarkable volume, ' New York City.' It
is remarkable in many ways — for the vast amount of
matter it contains, especially for the great number of
excellent illustrations, and for the surprising reve-
lations of the architectural wonders of the great
city."
Chauncey I\L Pepew says :
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the most valuable and comprehensive publication of
the kind which I know of."
President Eliot, of Harvard, says ;
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a great wealth of illustration."
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work."
Artemas Ward say:
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you deserve a gold medal."
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me to be finer than anything I have seen in the way
of such publications."
Col. Thos. It'ent7t'orth'Higginson Sdiys:
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as it is their best bid, up to this time, for the character
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Hon . John E. Russell says :
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which will remain when the city has been again
transformed by the inevitable growth of the country.''
Re7: Dr. A. H. Burlingham says :
" They are immeasurably ahead, in way of accurate
information, ample and beautiful illustration, and in
fine execution, of any guide books I have ever seen."
Rev. Dr. Andrew P. Peabody the venerable preacher
to the University, just before his decease, wrote :
" I have the greatest admiration for your ability,
skill and enterprise. No man deserves success more
fully than you, and if my best wishes could put a
breath of wind into your sails, they would feel the
breath. This ' New York book ' is a superb work."
Chas. Turner Dazev, the poet and playwright, says :
" It is no wonder that it has become a success, for
it deserves success in every way."
Copic.'iiii ch'oaiil clolli and gold binding soil on receipt of $2.00.
MOSKS KING, ruhlisher,
HOST ON, MASS.
THE KEMP BUILDING.
WILLIAM STREET, NORTHEAST CORNER OF CEDAR STREET.
JOHN MUNROE & CO.
New York : 32 Nassau Street (Mutual I^ife Buildiug.)
BOvSTON : 4 Post Office Square (Congress Building.)
DRAFTS on all the PRINCIPAL CITIES of EUROPE.
TRAVELERS' LETTERS OF CREDIT.
PARIS: MUNROE & CO., 7 Rue Scribe.
H'
,~n^
i^"*'
THK
Mutual Life Insurance Company
OF NEW YORK.
RICHARD A. McCURDY,
President
Assets Nearly ^200,000,000
AN ATTRACTIVE INVESTMENT
The policies of The Mutual Like
Insurance Company of New York are
regarded by prudent and far-sighted
men of affairs as offering the best
form of absolutely secure investment
not subject to tlie changes and vicissi-
tudes of trade and commerce, or to
fluctuations of market values which
necessarily pertain to stocks and
bonds. When the investor shall have
reached old age, or in the event of his
prior death, the sale of his property
is not required in order to realize its
value, for the reason that the contract
itself immediately produces its value
in cash at the time it is most needed
to benefit those for whom it was ob-
tained.
If a man undertakes the purchase
of property — be it houses and lands
or personal estate — with the intention
of gradually completing the purchase
out of his future annual income, in the
event of his death before his intentions
have been carried out, he leaves, as
the result of his efforts, a collection of
incompleted assets burdened with
debts and obligations, which if liqui-
dated by a forced sale, frequently ne-
cessitates a sacrifice of a large portion
of the interests of the survivors.
To an investment policy in the
Mutual Life, and to A^o other form of
recognized investment belongs this
provision : the unpaid installments —
which correspond to the incompleted
purchases just referred to — are at
once extinguished, and the contract is
good for its entire face
value without deduction.
It becomes at once an unimpaired
estate with a fixed future income for
the family, without the risks and ex-
penses of a settlement sale. To this
form of contract, which combines all
the best features of modern Life In-
surance, with the additional advan-
tages of creating in the future an
interest-bearing capital as an estate
for the maintenance of the family.
The Mutual Life invites the attention
of those who are seeking safe and
profitable investments. It invites in-
vestment not merely by those having
surplus funds, but by all who desire
for themselves and their families per-
fect and absolute protection against
the consequences of death or unex-
pected financial reverses.
The interest-bearing Consols of The
Mutual Life Insurance Company of
New York are issued in a variety of
forms to suit individual preferences
and circumstances. The rates of an-
nual purchase deposit are so adjusted
as to compensate for a greater or less
amount of future annual income as
may be desired by the purchaser.
" --^^ i^H,
NORTHWEST VIEW FROM TOWER OF MUTUAL LIFE BUILDING.
MUTUAL LIFE. INSURANCE COMPANY, NASSAU LIBERTY AND CEDAR STREETS.
s'2 il ,. - 1 • : • '
NORTHEAST VIEW FROM TOWER OF MUTUAL LIFE BUILDING.
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, NASSAU, LIBERTY AND CEDAR STREETS.
THE
Mutual Life
NSURANCE COMPANY
OF
NEW YORK.
RICHARD A. McCURDY, President.
ASSETS nearly - - $200,000,000
I^ay merits to T'ol icy-Holders since organization
over $367,000,000.
The Largest and Best Life Insurance
Company in the World.
"pHE great variety of its policy contracts connncnds it
to the consideration of all classes.
pHE Cojisol Policies issued by tJie Jl/ntual Life coi7i-
hine Life Lnsurancc and Investment in its best form.
For iii/orjimlioii, ^rpph' lo llic in-aicst Jiiviil or at Ihc Head
OjfiCi' of the Coiitpaiiy,
32 Nassau Street, - - - - NEW YORK.
SOUTHWEST VIEW FROM MUTUAL LIFE BUILDING.
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, NASSAU, LIEERTy ANO CEDAR STREETS.
SOUTHEAST VIEW FROM MUTUAL LIFE BUILDING.
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCe'cOMPANY, NASSAU LIBERTY AND CEDAR STREETS.
A Quaint and Valuable Book.
WHERE TO stop: A GUIDE TO THE BEST HOTELS."
Moses King, of Boston, has just added to his famous series of " King's
Handbooks " a charming booklet entitled "Where to Stop : A Guide to the Best
Hotels in the World." It is the most serviceable guide to the representative
hotels of all the continents that has ever been published, for while oihers have
published great hotel directories, or indiscriminately grouped hotels that pay
for their notices, Mr. King's selection of the best hotels has been made
regardless of payment. It has that practical and handsome makeup, combined
with accuracy and trustworthiness, so usual to Mr. King's publications. It is
practically a handbook of famous hotels ; and as such has a peculiar interest
and value for all who travel by land or water. The first part of the book
contains announcements and descriptions of 400 great hotels, each illustrated
with a delicate half-tone picture. These cuts show nearly 400 of the foremost
hostclries of the world, like the Fifth Avenue and Waldorf of New York; the
Brunswick and Vendome of Boston; the Hygeia, the Ponce de Leon; the
Auditorium, the Coronado, the Four Seasons, the Raymond, and the splendid
houses at Las Vegas, Colorado Springs, Helena, Lookout Mountain, Long
Branch, Luray, Monterey, the White Mountains, etc., etc.
Here also are the very interesting pictures of the chief hotels of Cuba and
Jamaica, of Mexico and South America, of the Bermudas and the Azores ; and
a great number of British and French, German and Scandinavian, Italian and
Swiss taverns, with several in North Africa, Syria, India and Japan.
The second part of " Where to Stop" consists of a wonderful list of 3000
notable hotels of the world, made up from the very latest authorities, and with
the rates of board shown forth. This list includes every important city in the
world, and the populations of these cities are given, as obtained from the
recent censuses, American, British, German, etc. There are also a few words
of comment in connection with each, giving the chief characteristics of the
place. This singularly interesting list includes the hotels in India and Persia,
Japan and China, South Africa and Egypt, besides the chief houses in Europe
and America. The contemplation of their titles alone is full of varied sug-
gestiveness and fascination; and the information conveyed is of practical
value.
" Where to Stop" is prettily bound in heavy pebbled, muslin-lined paper,
with illuminated designs of travel-scenes. It will be sent, postpaid, on receipt
of 25 cents, by Moses King, Boston.
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BROOKLYN LIFE INSURANot CoMHANY.
LIBERTY STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN NASSAU AND WILLIAM STREETS.
221
Hope,
formerly of
Fulton St.
now at
41 Nassau St.
near Liberty
St.,NewYork
No Better
Goods Made
Baskets of
candy
specially
prepared for
steamer and
out of town
trade
HOPE
41 Nassau $t.
near I^iberti) Bt.
New York
offers
his very best
Bon Bons
and Fanei)
Chocolates for
50e. a pound
fornierlj) sold
at |1.!^0 a pound
No branch
stores
anywhere
Established
32 years
Were we to
charge $50 a
pound they
would not
be more
delicately
made or
tastily
done up
APPRAISERS OF MANAGERS OF
LAND AND BUILDINGS. ESTATES.
^
James L. Libby, H. M. Libby.
Member Real Estate Exchanire.
James L. Libby & Son,
REAL ESTATE,
No. G9 Libert3^ Street,
(Bet. Broadway and Nassau Street),
NEW YORK.
M
MONEY LOANED CITY REAL ESTATE
ON BOND AND MORTGAGE^ BOUGHT, SOLD AND EXCHANGED.
THE NEW-YORK REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE.
LIBERTY STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN BROADWAY AND NASSAU STREET.
"* V ' -> \/>"^
ENGRAVERS AND PRINTERS OF
BONDS AND
CERTIFICATES OF STOCK
DIPLOMAS AND CERTIFCATES OF MEMBERSHIP,
Iii«iuraiice PoliciCvS, Calendars, and Commercial
Worli of all kinds.
RAILWAY TICKETS
/.V ALL WAKIE-IIES.
ALL WORK EXECUTED IN FIRE PROOF PREMISES.
c o R R E s I' c) ^; d e n c e i n \' i i' v. n .
Kranklin Baniv Note Con/lpany,
A. CLAXTON CAKY, Manager,
142 Broadway, cor. Liberty St., New York.
f¥%^J^ '>M ^
SI K ^rj
' J
qTM
MUTUAL LIFE BROADWAY BUILDING.
BROADWAY, SOUTHEAST CORNER LIBERTY STREET.
•rganized 1853*
WlLLlAMSBURGH CiTY
Fire Insurance Co.
OF BROOKLYN, N. Y.
CAPITAL, $250,000.00
Keservcd for Re-Insurance,
Unpaid Losses, etc., - - 629,867.63
NET SURPLUS, - - - - 597,380.81)
TOTAL ASSETS, - - $1,477,257.52
Policies issued under provisions of the Safety-Fund Law of
the State of New York.
No. 150 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
Cor. Broadway and Kent Ave. E. D. and 211 Montague St., W. D., Brooklyn.
AGENCIES THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY.
Directors:
MARSHALL S. DRIGGS, President.
WILLIAM MARSHALL, PETER WYCKOFF,
JOHN C. DEBEVOISE, JOHN G. JENKINS,
JAMES RODWELL, CHAUNCEY MARSHALL,
GEORGE E. KITCHING, STEPHEN B. STURGES,
MOSES MAY, SILAS W. DRIGGS,
MARTIN JOOST, HENRY W. SLOCUM,
JOS. J. O'DONOHUE, FREDERIC L. DUBOIS.
F. H. WAY, Secretary.
W. H. BRONA^N, Ass't Sec'y. JESSE ^^^ATSON, General Agent.
WlLLlAMbBUKUH Gl I Y HKb INbUHANCh COMPANY.
BROADWAY, NORTHEAST CORNER OF LIBERTY STREET.
ROYAL BLUE' LINE.
Fastest and Safest Trains in the World betiveen
NEW YORK. PHILADELPHL4.
BAE TIMORE and WASHING TON,
Via CENTRAL RAILROAD OF NEW JERSEY,
I'lLILADELPHIA &- READING R.R. atid
BALTIMORE 6- OHIO R.R.
All Trains I estidi/led from end to end, heated by steam and
lighted by Pintsch gas.
EXPRESS TR^IN TIME—:7(Eir YORK ^ND IVASHlUKGTOm:—
FIVE HOUBS.
PARLOR CARS OA" DAY TRAINS, SLEEPERS ON NIGHT TRAINS.
STATION IN NEW YORK:
Central Railroad oe New Jersey
FOOT OF LIBERTY ST., N. R.
rii '
VIEW ON WEST STREET.
CENTRAL BUILDING— WEST STREET, FOOT OF LIBERTY STREET— CENTRAL RAILROAD OF NEW JERSEY STATION,
CENTRAL RAILROAD OF NEW JERSEY.
STATION IN JERSEY CITv,
nCNTRAL BUILDING, CENTRAL RAILROAD OF NEW
LIBERTY AND WEST STREETS 'NORTH RIVEr), NEW YOR
THE
Liberty National Bank
OF NEW YORK
Liberty Street, Cor. of West Street
OPENED FOR BUSINESS OCTOBER 15,1891
CAPITAL, $500,000.00
Undivided Profits, net, - - - $112,869.87
Circulation, _____ 450,000.00
^ Individual, $1,241,934,79
Due Depositors:
Banks.
438,398.12
$1,680,332.91
$2,743,202.78
HENRY C. TINKER, PRESIDENT
HENRY W. MAXWELL, VICE-PRES. JAMES CH RISTI E, CASH I ER
DIRBCXORS
Henry C. Tinker, President.
Henry Graves, Maxwell & Graves,
Bankers, N. Y.
Geo. F. Baker, Pres. First Nat.Bank, N.Y.
R. F. C. Young, Pres. Finst Nat, Bank,
Jersey City.
Wm. Runkle, Pres. Warren Foundry and
Machine Co., N. Y.
DUMONT Clarke, Pres. American Ex.
Nat. Bank, N. Y.
JNO. H. Starin, Transportation, &c.. Pier
18, N. R..N. Y.
H. C. Faiinestock, Vice-Pres. First Nat.
Bank, N.Y.
Hon. Garret A. Hobart, Paterson, N. J.
J. A. G.^RLAND, Second Vice-Pres. First
Nat. Bank, N Y.
Henry W. Maxwell, Maxwell & Graves,
Bankers, N.Y.
Residents of New Jersey, as well as those in the lower western portion of New York
City, will find it to their advantage to utilize the Liberty National Bank's Safe Deposit
V.vuLTS, equipped with all modern safeguards and conveniences.
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD STATION, FOOT OF COfiTLANDT STREET, NEW YORK.
The Pennsylvania p^ailroad
Is patronized toy the Citizens of :Nev*- York because they
-want the very best of everythingf, and recog^nize that the
Pennsylvania Railroad meets, as a public carrier, this
demand. I^uxury, Speed, Security, Comfort, Reliability,
Privacy and Modern Conveniences are all to be attained
through the unequalled Passenger Service of
THE WORLD'S GREATEST RAILROAD.
Tickets, Baggage Checks and full information may be obtained, and Pullman Sleeping Car
and Parlor Car Reservations may be made at the following
TICKET OFFICES:
NEW YORK— No. 1196 Broadway (S. E. cor. •J9th St.); No. 433 Broadway; No. i Astor
House ; No. 944 Broadway; No. 1323 Broadway; No. in Broadway; No. 261 Broadway;
Station foot of Desbrosses Street ; Station foot of Cortlandt Street.
JERSEY CITY-At the Station.
BROOKLYN— No. 4 Court Street; Brooklyn Anne.x Station, foot of Fulton Street;
No. 8fo Fulton Street ; No. 98 Broadway.
Sam'l Carpenter,
J'.astcrn Passenger Agent,
W. W. I,ord, Jr.,
Ass''/ Eastern Bass'" r Aeent.
No. 1196 BROABWAY (S. K. OEXTUAL DEPOT.
0. D. SEAVEY, P. 0. Hotel Champlain, Clinton Co., N. Y.
Delaware &
Hudson R. R.
THE SHORTEST, QUICKEST AND BEST LINE BETWEEN NEW YORK AND MONTREAL.
The famous tourist route to Saratoga, Lake George, Lake Champlain, Ausable
Chasm, the Adirondack Mountains, Sharon Springs, Cooperstown, etc.
Anthracite Coal used exclusively. No dust. No smoke.
TRACK, EQUIPMENT AND SERVICE OF THE HIGHEST STANDARD.
NE'W YORK XICKKT OKKICE and IlSFOI*]»IAXIOBi BITR.KAI.T
Send si.x cents in stamps for Illustrated Handbook of the
Northern Resorts, etc.
H. G. YOUNG, 2d Vice-President.
J. W. BURDICK, Gen'l Passr Agt., ALBANY, N. Y.
236
DELAWARE &, HUDSON CANAL COMPANY.
COMPANY'S BUILDING, CALLED " THE COAL AND IRON EXCHANGE," CORTLANDT AND CHURCH STREETS.
Samuel McMillan, Cornelius O'Reilly, William J. Fryer,
President. \'ice-rresiclent. Sec'y and Treas.
- DIRECTORS
SAMUEL MCMILLAN, CORNELIUS O'REILLY, WILLIAM J. FRYER,
Vice President Mutual Bank. Architect and Huilder, 125 East Chairman N. Y. State Building
Member Real Estate Exchange. 44th Street. Law Commission.
Builder, 327 We2t 42d Street. Member N. Y. State Building Architect and Engineer, 19 Broad-
Law Commission. way.
THOMAS J. BRADY, WARREN A. CONOVER, JOHN W. MURRAY,
Superintendent of Buildings. De- Builder, Postal Building. Broad- Vice - Pres't German - American
partment of Buikiings, 220 way and Murray Street. Ins. Co.. 115 Broadway.
Fourth Avenue, Vice-Pres't Title Guarantee and
^^ Trust Co., 55 Liberty Street.
Kbw YorK Buimii and Lann iippraiseint Go.
104 HAVEIMEYER BUILDING,
Telephone Call, 7j CwRTLANDT. NEW YORlv.
A Corporation furnishing the accurate value of real estate.
The Officers and Appraisers are men who are actively en-
gaged in building, who have an intimate knowledge of the building
laws and who also have a direct knowledge of and facilities for
determining the value of lots, as well as buildings.
The Correct Appraisements of modern structures have
gone beyond the capacity of single individuals, and calls for the
united judgment of several experts.
The Certificate of Appraised Value issued by this Com-
pany is accurate and reliable.
To Executors, Trustees, Guardians, Attorneys, Owners,
intending Purchasers and all others who may require appraise-
ments of real estate this Corporation offers its services.
The Prices for appraising y)roj)erty are reasonable, viz. :
FOR NEW YORK CITY PROPERTY.
Per Lot.
On valuations amounting to $25,000 and under, - - $10.00
On valuations exceeding $25,000 and not exceeding $50,000 15.00
On valuations exceeding $50,000 and not exceeding $100,000 25.00
On valuations exceeding $100,000, by agreement.
238
THE HAVEMEYER BUILDING.
CHURCH STREET, EAST SIDE, FROM DEY TO CORTLANDT STREET.
Maryland Title Insurance
Trust Company,
EQUITABLE BUILDING,
Telephone BAI.TIMORE, MD.
EXAMINES AND INSURES TITLES
TO REAL ESTATE AND LEASEHOLD PROPERTY.
The only Company in Baltimore
doing a general Real Estate and
Title Insurance Business. . . .
Purchases and Sales of Real Estate Negotiated. Money
Loaned on Mortgage. Mortgages and Ground-
rents FOR sale. Conveyancing.
T. K. WORTH INGTON, President.
JOHN A. WHITRIDGE, Vice-President.
WILLIAM M. ISAAC, Sec'y and Treas.
McHENRY HOWARD, Chief Examiner.
DIRECTORS.
JOHN A. WHITRIDGE, JESSE HILLES,
ALEXANDER BROWN, E. H. PERKINS,
EDGAR G. MILLER, JACOB I. COHEN,
THOS. HILL, C. C. SHRIVER,
GEORGE WHITELOCK, CHAS. W. SLAGLE,
T. K. WORTHINGTON.
Rates for Title Insurance furnished on application. Correspondence
solicited.
TELEPHONE BUILDING.
COHTLANDT STSEET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN BROADWAY ANT CHURCH STREET.
J\)e lawyers'—
Title Ipsdrai^e^Qompapy
=— of f\e\u Yorl\. ==
GENERAL OFFICES:
Company's Building, 37 and 39 Liberty Street,
and 4414 and 46 Maiden Lane.
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1894:
$1,573,685.24.
TOTAL LOSSES TO JANUARY 1st, 1894!
$3,851.87.
Examines and insures titles to real estate for
purchasers or lenders or for members of the
Bar, the assured selecting his own counsel
if he desires.
EDWIN W. COGGESIIALL, Pres't nnd Geii'l Mniiueor.
CHARLES E. STKOXG, 1st Vieo-Presidtiit.
I>AVI« B. OGl>EX. S«l Vicc-l»rtsillanufacturers anb Wl^oUsak
Jewelers,
EVERYTHING THAT PERTAINS TO THE TRADE.
Watches, Pens, Holders, &c.. Tools and Materials,
Diamonds, Solid Silver "Ware, Optical Goods, I.amps,
Gold .lewelry. Clocks, Bronzes, A.C., Canes and Umbrellas,
I'lated Jewelry, Silver I'lated Ware, Jobbinjj and Repairs.
Illustrated CATALOGUES sent Free
On receipt of satisfactory business card.
48 & 50 MAIDEN LANE, ^ MYERS ( ^I \/ I
33 & 35 LIBERTY ST., ) BUILDING, { l>leW Y OTK.
248
S. F. MYERS & CO., JEWELRY, WATCHES, ETC.
MYERS BUILDING, Nos. 48 AND 60 MAIDEN LANE. BETWEEN NASSAU AND WILLIAM STREETS.
249
JOSEPH FAHVS.
HENRY F. COOK.
GEORGE E. FAHYS.
Established 1857.
^ Joseph Fahys & Co.
Manufacturers of the
Highest Grades of
Watch Cases,
>e>^
fe^-i
And Dealers in y^ >&^ ^^
American Watches.
Genkrai, Offices : FAHYS BUIIyDING (see page opposite,)
54 MAIDEN LANE, NEW YORK, U.S.A.
BRANCH OFFICES:
Chicago, -I- Cincinnati, -I- San Francisco.
Factory : Sag Harbor, N. Y.
THE FAHYS BUII^DING,
Where our General Offices are located, is one of the fine modern structures of New York.
Twelve stories high and e.xtending through the entire block from Maiden Lane to
Liberty Street, with grand fa(;ades on both thoroughfares, it is the tallest and most
notable building on historic Maiden Lane, the main centre of the jewelry and watch
trades, and the most conspicuous structure in that section of New York City.
Si p ;r r r f
r-
- F ® r f» P £ *'* ^
> ,-■- K 5 ^P ^^5i i^r r>!r iv r
', -W ^4 M •-
r ^
^it^il??
:)F LIBERTY STHEET FRONT,
JOSEPH FAHYS & CO., WATCH CASE MANUFACTURERS.
FAHYS BUILDING, No. 54 MAIDEN LANE, EXTENDING THROUGH TO LIBERTY STREET.
The Latest and Finest
Ricksecker's
NEW YORK PERFUMERY
FIRST
Exhibit Entrance World's Fair
Medals and Diplomas World's Fair
and only Perfumes sold at World's Fair
Wherever Known for Quality
May be bought in London, Berlin, St. Petersburg, Pesth,
Moscow, Dublin, Montreal, Gibraltar, Hong Kong, Alaska,
Sydney, Singapore, Christiania, Bermuda, and
throughout the civilized >vorId.
IIVIITATED MORE
THAN ANY OTHERS
Xheo. p^ icksecker
58 Maiden Lane
NEW YORK
n/ioLEff
V. (»ATER. I «
THEO. RICKSECKER, RICKSECKER'S PERFUMES, SOAPS, COLOGNES, ETC.
No. 58 MAIDEN LANE, BETWEEN WILLIAM AND NASSAU STREETS,
BENEDICTS TIME
Benedict Brothers
DIAMONDS : : .- /
JND WATCHES
A SPECIALTY: :
*
*
IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS
WA TCHES, DIAMONDS, CHAINS, RICH
JE WEIR V, SIL VER WARE AND
SOCIETY BADGES
SIDE VIEW.
UL/ill^l/iV'i • sleeve and collar
button made. All in one piece. Goes in like
a wedge and flies around across the buttonhole.
Strong, durable and can be adjusted with per-
fect ease. No wear or tear, and can be put on
any sleeve button.
BENEDICT BROTHERS
ESTABLISHED 1S21
BENEDICT B UILDING : : : : : :
BROAD WA V &- COR TLAND T ST.
NEW YORK
Keepers of the Cilv Time
'■" i^i .'
T '\ '^ r? 1
.f ft >r xY
J.MILHAU3 Son.
C/iEMIST. DRUGGIST
' AND 1/AP0RTEF(.
i N£AR COF^TLA^DT ST .
il /^lewYorK .
ti||^;^V^^
(T AVE two colonial churches, MILHAU'S PHARMACY ALONE REMAINS PER-
MANENT of thousands of concerns on Broadway since 1830.
John Mii.hau, the founder of this house, was born in Baltimore, 1796, of French refu-
g-ees, descended from very old families, who fled from the servile insurrection in St.
Domingo at the time of the great French revolution, being robbed on the passage of their
jewelry and valuables by corsairs who overhauled the vessel. On the death of his father,
in 1813, he left college and launched into the drug business. He was too American to settle
in France where his widowed mother went with her children on the restoration of Louis the
Eighteenth, or to accept the unsolicited appointment of French Consul-General at Baltimore.
He returned from his first trip, made for business and study, on the " Cadmus" with General
Lafayette, a distant relative, who was making his memorable visit to the United States.
In 1830, on his third trip to Paris, stopping at the mansion of his brother-in-law, the dis-
tinguished Dr. Sue, the physician of the Empress Josephine and the father of Eugene Sue
the novelist, he witnessed the uprising of the populace and the expulsion of Charles the
Tenth. He at once determined to come back to his native land, though General Lafayette,
who had been called to the head of affairs, entreated him to remain. Entrusted by the
General with the government despatches, and with a safe conduct, he started for the United
States via London. There he completed his purchases for this shop, which he fitted up on
an unprecedented scale of magnificence, the first to have marble tiling. The infusion pans,
counter scales and prescription balances were of solid silver. He had a bust made of Dr.
Rush, of Philadelphia, the foremost American scientist of the day, to surmount the doorway.
All else was in keeping. The New York College of Pharmacy, to which he was admitted,
gave its first course that very year. He filled a prominent part, as the records shovv, in its
determined, well-fought contest, when, with a backing of pharmaceutical and medical bodies,
it procured the beneficent law of 1S48 that prohibits the importation of adulterated, deterio-
rated, inferior or spurious drugs into the United States. He headed the suit in 1854 by which
Sharp's Broadway railroad, whose franchise, a fraud on the city, obtained through ques-
tionable legislation, was perpetually enjoined. This injunction was shamelessly circum-
vented in 1886 through the boodle Board of Alderman. His eldest son, the late John J.
Milhau, attained distinction as Surgeon and Brevet-Brigadier General of the United
States Army. His only surviving son and partner, Edward L. Milhau, is his successor.
J. MILHAU'S SON, PHARMACIST AND CHEMIST.
Nn. 183 BROADWAY, WEST SIDE, BETWEEN CORTLANDT AND DEY STREETS.
m MERCANTILE
NATIONAI, BANK
OP THE CITY OF NEW YORK,
lei BROADWAV,
CORNER OF DEV STREET.
Capital,
$1,000,000
Surplus Fund,
$1,000,000
WILLIAM R ST. JOHN,
President.
FRED'K B. SCHENCK,
Cashier.
JAMES V. LOTT,
Ass't Cashier.
This Bank solicits accounts from Individuals,
Firms and Corporations.
DIRECTORS.
CHARLES T. BARNEY, JAMES E. NICHOLS,
JOHN E. BORNE. GEORGE H. SARGENT,
WILLIAM C. BROWNING, CHARLES M. VAIL,
CHARLES L. COLBY, ISAAC WALLACH,
GEORGE W. CROSSMAN, JAMES M. WENTZ,
EMANUEL LEHMAN, RICHARD H. WILLIAMS,
SETH M. MILLIKRN, FREDERICK B. SCHENCK,
WILLIAM P. ST. JOHN.
258
THE CRAWFORD (DOWN-TOWN) SHOE STORE,
NO. 177 BROADWAY, WEST SIDE, BETWEEN CORTLANDT AND DEY STREETS.
CRAWFORD SHOE STORES IN NEW YORK
Broadway and Fourteenth St.
Broadway and Twelfth St.
Broadway, No. 177 (near Coktlandt St.)
VVkst 125TH St., No. 216 (Harlem.)
THE CRAWFORD SHOE FOR MEN ONLY.
Custom Made,
Hand Made,
Hand Sewed,
French Wel'I',
$6.00
5. CO
4.00
3.00
THE CRAWFORD SHOE is sold only to the wearer.
It ls never sold to dealers.
It can be obtained o.nly at our own
CRAWFORD SHOE STORES,
I.s' THE PRLNCIPAL AMERICAN CITIES.
^'
^
7 ^ oi
WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY'S BUILDING.
BROADWAY, NORTHWEST CORNER OF OEY STREET,
261
THE
n^tn yop^ ^m\ mh Exppss*
L
E
A
Ninety-nine times out of a hundred a person
buying a high class evening newspaper will ask
for the MAIL AND EXPRESS. It prints
the cream of the news daily, and all matter is
carefully sifted by a corps of experienced news-
paper men before it appears in its columns.
The MAIL AND EXPRESS has a healthy,
p"rowinir circulation, and the leading- evenino-
newspaper is a welcome guest in the homes of
New York's best citizens. It prints daily more
interesting special features and catchy little
departments than any newspaper in the metrop-
olis, morning or evening.
The advertising patronage of the MAIL
AND EXPRESS is the most select. All the
leading merchants of Greater New York use Its
columns to make their wares known.
■'^ It is the great home newspaper.
E No. 203 BROADWAY, cor. of Fulton St.
R
N
G
E
V
E
N
I
N
G
P
262
11 iisr«¥iM-^'-.
THE MAIL AND EXPRESS" BUILDING.
BROADWAY, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF°FULTON STREET, OPPOSITE ST.'pAUL'S CHURCHYARD.
26;
CHARTERED 1835.
New England Mutual
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
Post-Office Square, BostOn, MaSS.
BENJ. F. STEVENS, President. S. F. TRULL, Secretary.
ALFRED D. FOSTER, Vice-Pres't. WM. B. TURNER, Ass't Sec'y.
1. Issues an Endowment Policy at the Ordinary
Life Premium.
2. Pays Annual Distributions of Surplus in Cash.
Which may be used,
1st. To reduce premiums.
2(1. To purchase additional full-paid non-forfcit-
able insurance.
3. Endorses on each Policy the definite Cash and
paid-up values to which the insured is en-
titled by the Massachusetts statute.
4. For premium rates and values at any age,
apply to
New England Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Boston, Mass.,
Or to
Kenny & Ratcliffe,
GENERAL AGENTS,
208 Broadway Evening Post Building,
New Yorl-c City. I
264
y^ -■•#---- V|^;
•*^ K^ ■r' *^ ^
'- j5
'r^ tte.
THE EVENING POST" AND THE NATION," EVENING POST BUILDING.
BROADWAY, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF FULTON STREET.
365
INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION COMPANY
American Line
AND
Red Star Line
NEW YORK AND SOUTHAMPTON
NEW YORK AND ANTWERP
PHILADELPHIA and LIVERPOOL
PHILADELPHIA and ANTWERP
St. Louis,
(B'ld'g) ii,ooo
FI.1
tons
BEX
St. Paul, (B'ldg)
1 1 , 000
Paris, -
- 10,508
New York, -
10, S08
Kensington,
- - - 8,607
Southwark,
8,607
Friesland, -
7,116
Westernland.
5,736
Berlin,
■ - - 5,526
Noordland,
5,212
Chester,
- - - 4,770
Waesland, -
- 4,752
Belgenland,
- - - 3,692
Pennland -
3,760
Rhvnland,
- - - 3,689
Lord Gough,
- 3,655
Ohio,
- - - 3-392
Pennsylvania, -
3,166
Indiana,
- ■ - 3,158
Illinois, - - - -
3,126
Nederland,
- - - 2,839
Switzerland, -
2,816
Conemaugh,
-
2,328 tons
tons
\'\'r Rates ol Freight and Passage, appl}' to
INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION COMPANY
6 BowLixc Grekn, New York
No. 307 Walnut Street No. ^2 South Clark Street
pklLADELPH lA CHICAGO
No. 6ov; Market Street
GRAND HCrn-I. HIJILDLNC,
SAN FRANC I, SCO
267
JOHN BOYLE & CO.
199,201,203,205,207 Fulton St.
(West of Church St.)
NEW YORK CITY.
Awning Stripes. The largest and most varied stock in the United
States. Dyed in the Yarn Cotton Duck, Twills, etc.
Cotton Duck, in all weights and in widths from 6 inches to 13
feet.
Dyed Cotton Ducks and Twills, in all colors. Finished and
adapted to every purpose.
Bleached Ducks. Plain and in large variety of fancy weave.
Ducks and Twills. Fancy and unique in color and weave.
Sea Island and Uplands Cotton. Extra fine Twills and
Ducks for Press Bags, Canoe Sails, etc.
Manufactured Goods, standard U.S. Mail Bags, Lock Pouches,
Carrier Satchels, etc., in canvas and leather and both combined.
Tents. United States Army Standard. Manufacturing capacity
virtually unlimited.
Boyle's Patent Express Bow Covers, Paulins, Pontoons, etc.
Sample Cases for Commercial Travelers.
Dress Suit Cases at wholesale.
JOHN BOYLE & CO., MANUFACTURERS uF CuTTON DUCK AND AWNING FABRICS.
Nos. 199 TO 207 FULTON STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN CHURCH AND GREENWICH STREETS.
269
ESTABLISHED 1850.
CHARLES FRAZIER.
HENRY G. MARSHALL
N
1
J
>— ^
1^
J
VJ
' • Bankers • •
93 NASSAU STREKT,
(BENNETT BUILDING),'
Corner of Fulton Street,
NEW YORK.
Transact a General Banking Business
MAKE COLLECTIONS ON ALL PARTS '
OP THE UNITED STATES AND \
CANADA WITH PROMPT RETURNS, !
BUY AND SELL FOREIGN MONEY.
SKI.I. DRAFTS ON ENGLAND,
IRELAND AND vSCOTEAND,
LAWRENCE, FRAZIER & CO., BANKERS.
BENNETT SUIIDING, NASSAU STREET, NORTHWEST CORNER OF FULTON STREET,
In
Looking
Backward
Over a successful business career of nearly forty
years (in our building represented on the opposite
page), we note the wonderful improvements and
changes made both in this vicinity and through-
out the city. We have kept pace with them,
and ofttimes in advance, particularly in the
manufacture of fine apparel, both made-to-
measure and ready-to-wear.
Our products equal the best, while our
prices are less than usual for same qualities.
EVERYTHING FOR MEN'S WEAR.
A. RAYMOND & CO.
Men's Outfitters,
Nassau and Fulton Sts., New York.
The Pharmaceutical Era,
The Only Weekly Drug Paper in America.
D. O. HAYNES & CO., Publishers,
io6 and ro8 KUI^TOIS SXRBEX,
novi'isinij: Buildiais:, KH^W VORK.
E^TADi.isHtD Dec. 19, 1795
Shipping and Commercial List,
AND
New York Price Current,
THE OLDEST COMMERCIAL PAPER IN AMERICA.
SHIPPING AND COMMERCIAL LIST CO.
NEW YORK.
The Era Druggist's Directory,
THE OI>«I^Y
DIRECTORY OF THE WHOLESALE
AND RETAIL DRUG TRADES OF THE
UNITED STATES AND CANADA.
D. O. HAYNES & CO., Publishers,
io6 and jo8 Kn,XOI«J STREET,
0o\vnin}j: Bnildin^, NEW VORK.
DOWNING BUILDING.
FULTON STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN WILLIAM AND NASSAU STREETS.
F. W. Devoe &
C.T. Raynolds Co,
DIRECTORS
F. W. DEVOE.
J. SEAVEK I'AGE.
E:. L. MOLINEl'X.
E. H. RAYNOLPS.
Ij A. 1\TEYER.
G. W. BETTS.
C. C. BARRETT.
I. \V. DRUM.MOND
MANUFACTURERS OF
•aiiits, Yariiishes, Brushes
A
rtists' Materials. Mathematical Instruments
Fulton and William Sts.
The Oldest and Largest Paint
Business in the World
New York
ESTABLISHED 1755
Wn.i.iAM Post,
Water St., cor. Fletcher, New Y
1755
William Post & Sons,
Water St., cor. Fletcher
William & Gerardus Post,
Water St., cor. Fletcher.
William Post,
Water St., cor. Fletcher.
Butler & Barker,
Water St., cor. Fletcher.
Francis Butler,
Water St., cor. Fletcher.
Butler & Raynolds,
Water St., cor. Fletcher.
1798-
iSoo-
1834-
1836-
1846-
184S
ork.
1798
1800
1834
.836
1846
1848
1851
C. T. Raynolds,
Water St., cor. Fletcher. 1851-
Raynolds & Devoe.
Water St., cor. Fletcher. 1S52-
Raynolds, Devoe & Co.
106 Fulton St. 1855-
R.AYNOLDS, Devoe & Pratt,
106-108 Fulton St. 1S58-
F. W Devoe & Co.
Fulton, cor. William St. 1864-
C. T. Raynolds & Co.
io5-io8 FaUon St. 1864-
F. W. Devoe & C. T. Raynolds Co.
Fulton, cor. William St., New A'
176 Randolph St., Chicago.
1855
1864
1892
ork,
1S92
276
^^^^^. "*^ > ■ — p» ,m 1 MM I ■
F. W. DbVUt AND C. T. RAYNOLDS CO., PAINTS, VAHNIbH AND ART MATERIALS.
FULTON STREET, NORTHWEST CORNER OF WILLIAM STREET.
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FLOKIUA.
Kleveii Iron SteniiiHlilpH. atferoKatint; 81. (MX) tons. From
New York, VVediieHilny, Filclay mid Satuidiiy.
A Ilelislittiil Six I»a.v»" Voyasrc by Sea to Caivcstoii,
Texas. Thence by rail to Mexico < Ity and poiiit« in Mexieo,
and to l>eiivtr. Colorado Springs. Salt Lake City. Also to
San Franelsco and all California Winter liesorts.
n.OKIDA-VIA BKl NS« ICK, <».pat;e Toeket (Jiiide (mailed free.)
FOR INFORMATION OR ITINERARIES, ADDRESS
C. H. MALLORY & CO.
Pier 20, East River Near Fuiton Ferry), New York City.
THE
Tension Envelope Co
28 READE STREET, N. Y.
We call attention to our
Patent Tension Envelopes,
manufactured for mailing Sam-
ples of Dry Goods, Carpets,
Silks, Trimmings, Photographs,
Catalogues, and all merchan-
dise of third and fourth-class
matter.
They are used by all the lead-
ing firms in the country, and the
Postal authorities say:
"They are simple and secure,
easily opened for examination
and easily closed."
Samples, with Price and Size
List, mailed on application.
Special sizes made to order, and
estimates given on same.
CORRESPONDENCE INVITED
The Terrsion Envelope Co.
28 Reaue Street, New York
ST. PAUL'S CHAPEL— PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL.
BROADWAY AND CHURCH STREET, FROM FULTON STREET TO VESEY STREET.
TTHE
National Park Bank
OR NEW A OR In:.
Capital, $2,000,000
Surplus, $3,000,000
Extensive Safety J 'anits for the convenie)ice
of Depositors and Investors.
Entrance only tJirouoli tlie Bank.
EBENEZER K. WRIGHT, President.
Stuyvesant Fish, Vice-President.
Edward E. Poor, Vice-President.
Georoe S. Hickok, Cashier.
Edward j. Baldwin, Ass't Cashier.
2)irector8»
EUGENE KELLY,
EBENEZER K. WRICHT,
JOSEPH T. MOORE,
STUYVESAM- EISH,
GEORC.E S. HART,
CHARLES SIERNHACH,
CHARLES SCRIBNER,
EDWARD C. HOYT,
EDWARD E. I'OOR,
W. ROCKIIII.L I'OTTS,
AUGUST BELMONT,
RICHARD i:)ELAEIEI.D,
FRANCIS R. APPLETON,
JOHN JACOB ASTOR,
GEORGE S. HICKOK,
THE NATIONAL PARK BANK OF NEW YORK.
214 BROADWAY, BETWEEN FULTON AND ANN STREETS, OPPOSITE ST. PAUL'S CHAPEL.
287
Dick & Fitzgerald
OVER FORTY YEARS IN ANN STREET,
. . JUST WHERE YOU SEE THEM. . .
Headquarters for Usefid Books.
Standard Bck3KS on Games,
Cook and Receipt Books,
Speakers anp) Reciters,
Dialogue B(joks,
Isaac Pitman's System of Phonography,
Home Amusements and Dancing,
Amateur Theatricals,
Athletic Sports,
Lefter Writers and Books on Etiquette,
Gymnastics and Calisthenics,
Fortune Tellers and Dreams,
Masonic Books, etc., etc.
Coiiiphic Catjiogiii's mailed free to any address.
Scud for one to
DICK & FITZGERALD, Publishers.
i8 Ann Street, New York.
DICK & FITZGERALD, PUBLISHERS.
NO. 18 ANN STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN NASSAU STREET AND BROADWAY.
ESTABLISHED 1846.
THE
BANKER'S MAGAZINE
HAS BEEN GREATLY
ENLARGED
AND
IMPROVED.
JOHN G. FLOYD, PUBLISHER,
SUCCESSOR TO
THE HOMANS PUBLISHING CO.,
83 JOHN STREET - - - NEW YORK.
293
•■** <" Ho, . . ^-^ _,,,.
'Smt ' > /^ yjy'-'palm Beach
^u\c\<^^\: £if2e ho
laVaooat], Ga.,
Plorsida aod
^b^pou^ll epcillmai2
CaPj'lev/^yopl^ho
tt^a (i?^ir, aosl odI,)'
Or2G /Ji^f^t OciL
n<^vy g)[20Ft kine ho
fj\{en, %. C,
^ufii^ha,
/^aeor2 af2d
f\\^Se (ieopfia.
012 1^ 23 [700 P^
aod CJ^^y^ha.
Ot2lN/ 26 l^ODP^
j\|ev/yop|^ho/^aeor2
.f rr'^ ho
^hIar2hi<^Coa^heir2^
229 Jpoaslv/a^,
Oev/ ¥op^, Qn^
4)^12 o^^lVaniaF^.f^.
iic-l^eh Office^.
294
295
ttbc tai'ijcst iprtntiuii \Ph\tc /Iftanufactiuiiui lEstabliebmcnt in the Countvv.
F. A. Ringler Co. e
esigners, Photo-
ngravers& Electrotypers
21 & 23 BARCLAY ST.. 26 & 28 PARK PLACE, NEW YORK.
F. A. Rin<;lp:r, President. M. R, Brinkman, Vice-President and Treasurer
G. J. Kraemer, Secretary. Jt'sti.x Rinoi.er, Manager.
We manufacture plates for all printing and embossing purposes, from the
finest photo-gravure down to the outline newspaper cut. Our prices are
low, compared with the quality of work. Our processes are as follows :
HALF-TONE PATENT PROCESS.
The chief points of this process differ from all others, and are as follows :
A negative of the painting, engraving, photograph or work to be reproduced is
first obtained. As in any other branch of Photo-Engraving a picture in relict
is then made by our new method on copper. The copper plate, being finished,
is then covered with an infinitesimal coating of steel, by means of an electric
current, so as to enable it to with.stand the wear of printing, and keep up the
sharpness of the printing surface to an unlimited edition (patent applied for),
as we are the only process engravers in the country that have applied the above
method successfully.
ZINC ETCHING.
\V(i were the first establishment in this country that produced Zinc Etching
Engravings for newspapers and commercial printing successfully, and by our
electric light facilities we are in a position to turn out the work on time, as we
do not have to depend on sunHght. When necessary it is possible for us to
produce a cut from a pen and ink drawing inside of two (2) hours. The superi-
ority as to a clean, sharp and deep line of these plates is generally acknowledged
liy the press. All cuts for newspaper printing-, where stereotype plates are
used, we suggest to have mounted on a metal back.
PHOTO-ELECTROTYPING.
This process is best adapted for the reproduction of book pages in all languages,
also for reproducing large catalogues to a small pocket edition size. We are
prepared to execute large orders at the rate of several hundred pages per dajf.
The advantage of this process for this particular kind of work is not only that it
is cheaper, but ahso that we furnish a sharp and deep electro-plate ready to be
used the same as any other electrotype plate taken from a type form (for
PATENT blocks), or mounted on wood blocks ready for the printer's use.
ELECTROTYPING.
We assert, with a degree of pride, that our facilities for the rapid and .satisfactory
execution of Electrotyping cannot be equaled to-day by anj' other house. We
have the largest bath.s, the best moulding facilities, andthe "only perfect metal-
izing pi-ocess (our own invention), and the latest machines and appliances to be
found in the counti-y for finishing plates. We are prepared to execute orders
of any size or quantity with a speed, accuracy and finish such as uo other house
can hope to rival, and at low prices.
STEEL-FACING PROCESS.
All half-tone plates etched on copper for art reproductions, book and catalogue
illustrations, or duplicate electrotypes made from wood cuts and other engraved
plates, are well known to run longer on steel-faced plates than on the ordinary
electrotype. Jobs to be printed in red ink (a color that is injured in brilliancy
by contact with copper), should also be steel-faced, this additional expense
being only a fraction more than the price of ordinary plates. We recommend
the facing of plates in the above cases as giving much more satisfaction.
Samples of our work and estimates cheerfully furnished on application.
Yours respectfullj-,
F. A, RINGLER CO., 21 &. 23 parclay st., as & 28 park place, n. y.
296
F. A. RINGLER CO., ENGRAVERS AND ELECTROTYPERS.
21 AND 23 BARCLAY STREET, CORNER OF CHURCH STREET, EXTENDING TO 26 AND 28 PARK PLACE.
B/IWO f DOTTEH
MANUFACTURERS,
IMPORTERS
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
Gk^^w^FQ ^nd Pottery
26, 28, 30 & 32 BARCLAY STREET,
ONE SQUARE WEST OF BROADWAY,
NEW YORK.
Limoges, France. Carlsbad, Bohemia. Steinschoenau, Bohemia.
KoETZSCHENBRODA (l)ei Dresden), Germany.
298
BAWO & DOTTER:— CHINA, GLASS, POTTERY AND ART GOODS.
NOS. 26, 28, 30 AND 32 BARCLAY STREET, SOUTH SIDE, JUST WEST OF CHURCH STREET.
The Original and Genuine
(WORCESTERSHIRE)
IFA&PERRINS'
SAUCE
imparts the must delicious taste and zest to
EXTRACT
Of a Li-iTTER from
a jSiedical gen-
tleman at iNlad-
ras, to his brother
at WOKCESTEK,
May, 1851.
"Tell
LEA & PERKINS'
that their sauce is
highly esteemed in
India, and is in my
opinion, the most
palatable, as well
as the most whole-
some sauce that is
made."
SOUPS,
ORAVIES,
FISH,
I30T & COL,»
ill EATS,
GAME,
WELSH-
RAREBITS,
Beware of Imitations ;
see that you get Lea & Perrins'
Signature on every bottle of the OriKiual and Genuine.
JOHIV ntJIVCAIV'S SOP¥S, NEW YORK^
1 1 II HI ^
1 1 .. « .. .. „
■ ■ 11 pn II "
JOHN DUNCAN'S SONS, IMPORTERS OF SPECIAL GROCERIES.
NO. 43 PARK PLACE, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN CHURCH STREET AND COLLEGE PLACE.
FALL RIVER LINE,
OCCUPYING THE
LONG ISLAND SOUND ROUTE liETWEEN
New York and Boston,
HAS THE FINEST
Quintette of Steamboats
THAT THE WORLD HAS EVER SEEN.
The PRISCILLA
PURITAN
PILGRIM
Plymouth:
providence
Are the Largest, Best Equipped, Safest and Handsomest
Steamboats ever Constructed.
FROM NEW YORK: Steamers leave Pier 28 (cild number), North River,
foot of Murray Street.
FROM BOSTON : Trains connecting with Steamers at Fall River, leave
Park Square Station of the New York, New Haven & Hartford
Railroad, (Old Colony System.)
This route is one of the most attractive and naturally beautiful traversed
by any transportation agency in the world. The trips of the Fall River Line
Steamers are made throughout the entire year. Each steamboat has its own
orchestra, and the service on each member of the fleet is maintained at the
highest possible standard.
TICKETS IT A THIS ROUTE ARE ON SALE AT ALL OF THE PRINCIPAL
TICKET OFFICES IN THE UNITED SI A I ES.
J. R. KKNDRICK, GEO. L. CONNOR,
rresidenl. Pass' 7- Traffic Manager.
S, A. GARDNER, O. H. TAYLOR,
Superintendent. Gen' I Passenger Agent,
^ If
ii5a i a f
ESTABLISHED 183 1
Charles Ahrenfeldt & Son,
= = "(Importers of
Pottery, Glassware,
LIMOGES AND CARLSBAD CHINA,
50, 52 and 54 Murray Street,
NEW YORK.
PARIS: No. 130 Rue du Faubourg St. Denis.
LIMOGES; Faubourg Montjovis 2 bis.
DRESDEN, CARLSBAD.
Official Edition of tlie Decisions U. S. Circuit Courts
of Appeals,
Cited as " U. S. App."
By SAMITEI^ A. BI.AXCHFORD,
Official Reporter lor all the Nine Circuits.
Annual subscription price $3.00 net per volume, includ-
ing Semi-Monthly Advance Parts (for temporary use only),
sent postage pre-paid. The following bound volumes are
now completed : U. S. Appeal Reports, Vols, i, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7,
9, 10, II, 12 price $3.25 per volume.
Tiedeman on the Law of Municipal Corporations .
One Vol. 1026 Pages. Law Sheep.
Price $6.00 Net, or $6.30 by Express, all charges Prepaid.
A TREATISE on the law of Municipal Corporations in the United States, by Chris-
topher G. TiKDEMAN, author of " Real Property," "Legislation of Police Power,"
etc., and Professor of Law in the LIniversity of the City of New York. The present
volume, like the other works of the author, is designed to present, within the confines of one
volume, a succinct and clear statement of the law of Municipal Corporations, by an inclusion
of everything material, and exclusion of everything immaterial, to the clear comprehension
of the general principles and rules of law bearing upon or involved in the subject.
The Art of Winning Cases ; or Modern Advocacy.
By HENRY HARDWICKE, of the New York Bar.
IN this work the author has given many valuable suggestions upon preparation for trial
and the conduct of cases in court. He has not confined himself to a bare statement of
the rules which should guide the advocate in the trial of cases, but he has shown how
Erskine, Scarlett, Daniel Webster, Rufus Choate, Henry Clay and many other great English
and American advocates have put these rules into practice.
The proper study of an Advocate is Advocacy.
It is unquestionably true that advocacy is a subject which has been too much neglected
of late. No matter how profound a lawyer's knowledge of the law may be, if he is not
skilled in the art of presenting his arguments upon the law and the facts to court and jury,
as well as in the difficult art of examining witnesses, he can never do his client justice.
Many mortifying failures are daily made in our courts, simply because the lawyers who have
failed are ignorant of the methods of preparing and trying cases, followed by the greatest
and most successful advocates. These methods are clearly stated in this work.
Hardwickes "Aft of Winning Cases" is an Octavo Volume of 700 Pages, in best
Law Book Style. PRICE, $5.00 NET.
BANKS & BROTHERS) law publishers,
20 MURRAY ST., NEW YORK.
BANKS & BROTHERS, LAW BOOK PUBLISHERS.
No. 20 MURRAY STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN CHURCH STREET AND BROADWAY,
Z°7
W. F. MASTERS
FRACTICAL
• Piano IVIover •
Ai\D DEALER I^
PARKER'S PIANO STOOLS,
SCARFS AND LAMPS,
No. OS Fifth Avenue, Nciv York.
Before Placing Orders for
HALF-TONE PLATES,
For illustrating Catalogues or other purposes, it will pay you to investigate
and see whether our claim that we are doing by far the BEST HALF-TONE
ENGRAVING in the country is true. The verdict of the Magazines is
that OUR PLATES ARE THE BEST, and we are now doing very much
more Magazine work than all the other engravers of New York combined.
The GILL Engraving Company,
104 CHAMBERS ST. (corner of Church St.),
NEW YORK.
Park Engraving
and Printing Co.
PARK TLACE,
Near Broadway,
NEIV YORK.
SOCIETY and COMMERCIAL WORK,
EMBOSSING and LITHOGRAPHING
OUR SPECIALTIES. : : : : : :
Park Engraving and Printing Co.
No. 6 P^RK PLACE.
NEWSPAPER ROW. ST. PAUL'S CHUKCM. POST-OFFICE
PARK ROW, OPPOSITE THE POST-OFFICE.
LOOKING SOUTH FROM MAIL STREET.
bHuAUvVMr , Uh-Huoi i L I ri b Hubl-UPFICE.
LOOKING NORTH FROM BARCLAY STREET
THERE IS NOTHING SLOW ABOUT THE
New Y ork IVj ercury
In 1894 it more than doubled its circulation, which is more
than can be said of any other New York Newspaper.
The politics of
THE NEW YORK MERCURY
are Democratic. It supports the regular National, State and
City nominations through thick and thin.
THE NEW YORK MERCURY
is the Sporting Authority of the United States. It prints
more sporting advertisements than all the other New York
papers combined. Its sporting news is accurate and reliable,
and is quoted all over the country.
THE SUNDAY MERCURY
was established in 1839 ''^"d still retains its old clientele.
It is making new readers every day. Advertisers realize that
THE NEW YORK MERCURY
is enjoying a big boom and are getting in on the ground
floor with time contracts. Rates furnished upon application.
Daily .... i cent.
Sunday .... 5 cents.
Per Year .... 2 dol's.
3 Park Row, New York City.
The most perfect aad most universally adopted.
FABRIC FIRE HOSE CC.
Sole Manufacturers of the Balanced-Woven Fabric, Rubber-Lined
FIRE HOvSE,
Perfect for Fire Department and General Uses.
Rendered proof against fabric rot or mildew.
Used to the e.vtent of millions of feet by fire departments throughout the United States.
13 PARK ROW, NEW YORK.
Fabric FtJ^e Hose Co.
The Katoric Kire Hose Co., 13 Park Row, are the inventors and sole manu-
facturers of a patented fire hose, known as the balanced-woven fabric, rubber-lined fire
hose, adapted for fire protection in cities and for general mill use. They are also the originators
of a process of rendering the fabric rot and mildew-proof by waxing the yarn, a very valu-
able feature in a fire hose. The hose of this Company is found in nearly all of the tire de-
partments of the large cities, the sales up to the present time amounting to nearly 5,500,000
feet. This company supplied the World's Fair with 80,000 feet of fire hose, the contract
having been awarded in competition with the entire world.
Mechanical Rjibber Co.
Tlie Meclianlcal Rubber Co., with offices at 15. Park Row, is the largest
concern in the country in the mechanical rubber line. Its annual productions mount up into
the millions, and embrace a very wide range of articles, such as belting, hose, packing gas-
kets, mats, bicycle tires, tubing, valves, wringer rolls, etc. Factories located both East and West
are thoroughly equipped with the most improved machinery and with every other facility for
the economical production and distribution of goods. The hose, belting and packing of its
manufacture, are made in two grades— "Amazon," the very best that the finest materials and
workmanship can produce, and "Brazilian," a high grade brand, equal to the best produc-
tions of most other makers. A strong recommendation in favor of these goods is the
uniformity of excellence, a merit often lacking in the products of other makers. No pains or
e.xpense are spared to keep up the highest standard of quality, a task less difficult for a com-
pany so magnificently equipped than for others.
THE MECHANICAL RUBBER CO.
ALL VARIETIRS OF
Rubber Goods, Mechanical and Special.
Send for Catalogues.
AMAZON HOSE," I5 PARK ROW. NEW YORK.
BRST IN THE MARKF.T. BRANCHES: CLEVELAND, CHICAGO.
NEW YORK BELTING & PACKING CO., LTD., AND THE MECHANICAL RUBBER CO.
NOS. 13 AND 15 PARK ROW, BETWEEN ANN AND BEEKMAN STREETS, OPPOSITE THE POST-OFFICE,
New
York
ONI^Y
ONE
CENT.
Daily
News.
Mi
Sunday • News
ii^ Complete Novel,
.• ; Onfy THREE Cents. .- .-
The LARGE CIRCULATION of the NEWS indi-
cates its value as a paper for Readers.
Advertisers know the value of Circulation.
Read the "NEWS!"
Advertise in tiie "NEWS!"
3M
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS -. — ENGLISH AND GERMAN EDITIONS.
No. 32 PARK ROW, BETWEEN ANN AND BEEKMAN STREETS, OPPOSITE THE POST-OFFICE.
The New York "Press."
In the four past issues of Printers'
Ink a statement has been conspicu-
ously published to the effect that the
American Newspaper Directory for
1894 accords to the New York Pri'ss a
larger circulation rating than any other
daily paper in New York City receives.
Now the New York T'ri'ss does not
claim to have the largest circulation of
any daily paper in New York. That
claim is put forth by the Sini, the [Ifnvs,
the Herald and the' IVorhi. The inter-
esting fact is that the 'Vrcss is the only
one of the five that is willing to allow
the public to know just what edition it
actually has printed. By the Directory
system of rating circulations, the letter
" A " is the highest symbol accorded to
any publication that declines or neglects
to furnish information on the subject.
It means exceeding 75,000 copies. All
the four papers named above are rated
"A," but the 'Press stands alone as the
one willing to show the absolute facts ; it
therefore gets credit for its actual aver-
age issue of 111,812 copies per day
throughout an entire year, and it ought
to be mighty proud of the success it
has achieved. -"/^;////t';'5' Inl;, may 2,1894.
316
The shortest and cheapest business route runs directly from producer to consumer.
THK FAMOUS PRODUCERS OF THE BEST RESULTS.
The American Art Papers
.'\ R K M A 1 i K I! .
PETER ADAMS CO.
Potter Building, 38 Park Row
new york city
They include Plate Papers for Steel Plate, Photogravure Plate, Gelatine
Plate, Half-tone Plate, Chromo-lithographic, Photo-lithographic and all
Process Plate Printing. Fine Map Papers for all kinds of Map Printing.
Chart Papers, Superfine Book Papers and fine Catalogue Papers.
Adams & Bishop Co.
POTTER BUILDING, 38 PARK ROW
NEW YORK CITY
Manufacturers of FINE PAPERS
The Specialties manufactured hy this ("oiupain, in its own uiills, are
Bible Papers, Fine Book, Writing, Music, Label and
Lithographic Papers, and Paper and Card for Coating
CAPACITY LARGE DELIVERIES PROMPT QUALITY UNIFORM
318
POTTER BUILDING:— THE O. B. POTTER TRUST.
PARK ROW, NASSAU AND BEEKMAN STREETS.
319
Vanderbilt Building
NASSAU AND BEEKMAN STREETS
Southeast Corner
New York City
THE new fourteen-story extension of the Vanderbilt
Building, on the corner of Nassau and Beekman
Streets, designed and constructed under the
supervision of Messrs. McKim, Mead & White, archi-
tects, is absolutely fireproof, and contains every known
modern device for the comfort of tenants — electric
lights, steam heating, Otis elevators, etc. Telephone
service from each story to the Superintendent's office.
The building has two entrances — one on Nassau Street
and the other on Beekman Street. The hallways on
every story are tiled with white marble; the offices kept
thoroughly clean; no extra charge of any kind. .
. . The proximity of the Vanderbilt Building to the
Brooklyn Bridge, to the Court House, the City Hall,
the Post-office and the great newspaper offices, together
with its sunny offices and its exposure to the cool, south-
westerly breezes of summer, make it a most desirable
office building. The offices are subdivided to suit
tenants, without charge. For particulars apply to . .
David L. Haiglit, Agent
VANDERBILT BUILDING
132 Nassau St., New York
THE VANDERBILT BUILDING.
NASSAU STREET, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF BEEKMAN STREET.
Established 1867.
RuLAND & Whiting,
Real Estate,
TEMPI.E COURT,
NEW YORK CITY.
Down Town Property a Specialty.
AGKNTS FOR
Metropolitan Realty Building,
A substantial fire-proof structure for manufacturing purposes.
TEMPLE COURT,
A LARGE, FIRST-CLASS OFFICE BUILDING.
The full care taken of all kinds of Im-
proved AND Unimproved Real Estate in New
York City; Rents Collected; Taxes Paid;
Arbitrations and Appraisements attended to;
Insurance Effected; Improvements Super-
vised; Real Estate Bought and Sold, at
Private Sale and at Auctions; Loans on
Mortgages Secured, etc.
MANLY A. RULAND. WILLIAM H. WHITING.
Jl 1
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p p ^
ft n n
mn
w^ wt*'p*» is:^
1
ruf
TEMPLE COURT.
BEEKMAN STREET, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF NASSAU STREET.
H£NRY IVllLLER, BOOKSELLER AND IMPORTER,
No. 122 NASSAU STREET, EAST SIDE, BETWEEN ANN AND BEEKMAN STS.
Don't Forget when you
Want BOOKS that
Henry Miller,
BOOKSELLER AND IMPORTER,
IS NOW AT 122 NASSAU STREET,
Between ANN and BEEKIMAN STS. NeW YOPk,
--SS^
■{i-- h-;ri
Ir
,^
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^
MORSE BUILDING.
NASSAU STREET, NORTHEAST CORNER OF BEEKMAN STREET.
THE AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY.
GENERAL DEPOSITORY, 10 EAST 23d ST. NEW BUILDING, NASSAU & BEEKMAN STS.
r. Its Objfxts. The Society was organized seventy years ago, in 1825.
Such men as Bishop Griswold, Drs. Spring, Milledoler, Milnnr, Baldwin,
Edwards, and other eminent divines and laymen of many evangelical denom-
inations, saw the need of harmony in preparing and circulating a gospel
literature for the use of all Christians, and by the coalescing of various local
societies this National Institution was formed.
Its work has been conducted by three committees, the Publishing, Dis-
tributing and Finance, with their several secretaries, supervised by the three
united in its Executive Committee.
Its work is on three main lines : sales of its publications by its store, in
various depositories and through the trade ; sales and grants by its colporters;
and grants to the destitute and to Christian workers at home, and aid to
missionaries in many foreign lands.
Its colportage, carrying the gospel in the most effective publications to
destitute regions, largely at the west and south, is a work whose necessit}'- and
usefulness cannot well be overestimated. The colpojter is a lay preacher as
well as a salesman, and hundreds of Sunday-schools and churches have been
started by them.
The foreign missions of many denominations most gratefully welcome the
invaluable aid of the Society in publishing books and tracts in 151 languages.
2. The Publications of the Society, consisting of books, tracts, wall-
rolls, cards, and periodicals, aggregate many millions of copies. They are
adapted to the use of all ages and all classes of people, and in many languages.
They are of a high standard of excellence in literary merit, engravings,
material and workmanship, and are sold at reasonable rates.
Some of its issues have attained a remarkably large circulation: its Bible
Dictionary, 220,000 copies; Pilgrim's Progress, 453,000; Baxter's Call, 460,000;
Nelson on Infidelity, 140,000; Songs for Little Ones at Home, 338,000; Peep
of Day, 155,000; Dew Drops, 765,000; Daily Food, 511,000; Come to Jesus,
746.000. Many of its tracts have reached a circulation of over a million copies
each. Its periodicals are seven — four in English, two in German, three for
children ; two weeklv.five monthly, and are as ioUo\\s:.4if!erican Messens;er, Child's
Paper, Morning Light, Apples of Gold, Light and Life, Dattscher Volks-freund,
and Amerikaniseher Botschafter. In addition to its circulation by colportage
and grants, and from its general depositorv at 10 East 23d Street, it main-
tains agencies or branches in Boston, Philadelphia, Rochester, Chicago,
Cincinnati and San Francisco.
3. The New Building is upon the site occupied by the Society since its
organization. The lot is nearly 100 feet square. The structure rises twenty
stories from Nassau Street, with a basement and cellar below, and a tower
three stories above the main roof, covering about half the area. The height to
the top of the tower is 291 feet, to top of the staff rising from the tower, 307
feet. The depth of the excavation below the pavement is thirty-five feet,
from which piles were driven below from ten to twent)'-five feet.
The frame is of steel skeleton, lined with brick; the front wall for the first
six stories is of granite, above which it will be brick and terracotta.
The money needed for erecting the building has been obtained by mort-
gaging the lot, so that the current operations of the Society will not be inter-
rupted by this undertaking. There is good reason to hope that the gift of this
ground to the Society by its founders will become the means of furnishing an
endowment, which will supplement the gifts of its members and friends and be a
pledge for the execution of any trusts committed to it by legacy or otherwise.
326
ESTATE AGENT.
THE AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY.
NASSAU STREET, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF SPRUCE STREET.
327
iRH)
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The
Times
,,
The World."
.i , » wi"
"Postal Telegraph."
A.. SCflUI^T^E:
IMPORTED, KEY WEST AND DOMESTIC
CIGr^^K^S
NEW YORK TIMES BUILDING
No. 39 Park Row, . . . New York City
BRANCH STORES
NEW YORK WORLD orijcn=3curnal.
PRINTING HOUSE SQUARE, "tRIBUNE" BUILDING, PARK ROW, EAST SIDE OF CITY HALL PARK,
335
The
American Constitution,
The
American Idea.
The
American Spirit.
These first, last,
and all the time
forever.
The "Sun" is
the Greatest of all Newspapers.
336
THE SUN"— THE SUN" BUILDING.
PARK ROW, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF FRANKFORT STREET, OPPOSITE CITV HALL PARK.
337
New York Safety Steam Power Co.
NEW YORK STORE: 30 Cortlandt St. CHICAGO STORE: 58 So. Canal St.
PHILADELPHIA STORE: 15 No. 7th St.
WE invite attention to the following schedule of our productions in the line of Steam
Engines and lioilers. It will be noted that we build a variety of types and sizes.
We seek to make known the fact that we carry a large stock, ready for delivery, and can
therefore meet almost any requirement PROMPTLY. We solicit inspection of goods, corres-
pondence, consideration of our quotations and patronage.
The list printed cm this page conveys abbreviated information designed to be simply
INTRODUCTORY. Our catalogues willtell the rest:
CATALOGUE A.— Illustrates and describes Vertical Engines. Contains power tables, dimen-
sions and useful data of various kinds,
CATALOGUE B.— Illustrates and describes Horizontal Auto-Cut-Otf Engines, and gives dimen-
sions, power tables and looo references.
CATALOGUE C— Relates to High-Pressure Marine Engines.
CATALOGUE D.^The " Worthington " Sectional Water Tube Boiler,
SCMEDUL_E_
CLASS A,
CLASS A 5.
Vertical Self-Contained Engines.
Engine complete in itself; adjusted, and
ready for duty the moment it is bolted down
and supplied with steam,
II .Si/.cs:— 2 to :io u. r.
CLASS A 1.
Yertical Disc-Cranii Engines.
One bearing for crank shaft in the frame,
and an independent pedestal to support the
outer end. The engine is mounted on a sub-
base of proper height to allow a wheel 48
inches diam. to swing clear of floor.
e Si/.es :—•>{) »iiil 25 II. 1'.
CLASS A 2.
Yertical Disc-Crank Engines.
Constructed with one bearing for crank
shaft in the frame, and an independent low
pillow block to support the outer end of crank
shaft. fi si«.s :-s.-i to 100 II. i:
CLASS A 3.
Vertical Centre-Crank Triple-
Bearing Engines.
Two bearings in frame and an outside
bearing. Capable of heavier duty than Class
A 2. 11 Si/(> II. 1'.
CLASS A 4.
Vertical High-Speed Engines.
Especially designed for service in connec-
tion with Isolated Electric Lighting. Fitted
with throttling governor.
a .si/.c!( :— a ((I 2,-) II. I'.
Vertical Automatic Cut-Off
Engines.
10 (11 250 II. P.
CLASS A 6.
Vertical Low-Pressure Engines.
We build this class to meet requirements
where low boiler pressure only are available,
S Sizes :— 4 Iii 20 II. 1'.
CLASS A 7,
Vertical Engines and Boilers
Combined.
A complete^ compact and con''c}tictit combi-
nation. It embraces the engine, boiler and
injector upon a single base— the whole being
completely piped and ready for immediate
service.
27 Sizes :— 3 to SO H. I'.
CLASS B.
Horizontal Auto-Cut-Off Engines.
11 sizes:— 25 tii l.jO II. V.
CLASS B B.
Horizontal Tandem Compound
Auto-Cut-Off Engines.
100 II. r. iuiil I piviinl.
338
il Wit -SB i
^ t-^
THE WORLD" BUILDING, PARK ROW AND FRANKFORT STREET.
AS SEEN FROM BROADWAY, ACROSS CITY HALL PARK.
339
Perry 's Pharmacies
OPEN ALL NIGHT
Sini Bttilding and World Building
POPULAR PRICES
NEW-YORK CITY.
LOOKING SOUTHEAST FROM THE "wORLD •
'V,
•~-^
»»
NEW-YORK CITY.
LOOKING NORTH FROM THE WORLD '
324
f
? s:? -^r'-^p ij^
NEW-YORK CITY.
LOOKING SOUTHWEST FROM THE WORLD" DOME.
'-.•■:;- CITY HALL. WARREN STREET
NEW-YORK CITY.
LOOKING N.W. FROM "wCRLD " DOME, BEFORE ERECTION OF ' POSTAL TELEGRAPH " AND ' HOME LIFE " 6UILCINGS.
345
ii.wi-
STAATS 2EITUHG
LLIAM STREET.
NEW-YORK CITY.
LOOKING EAST-NORTHEAST FROM THE " WORLD " DOME.
NEW-YORK CITY.
LOOKING WEST FROM THE WORLD " DOME.
: O E S T A B L I S H E D 1 K T O . C^
Bliyen&Carrington
^laitttfitctxtt*evfir oi
Lubricating Qils
- - AND -
Qreases.
HEADQUARTERS FOR FIRST-CLASS
CYLINDER^
MACHINERY and
DYNAMO OILS.
251, 253 and 255 Front Street,
NEW YORK
348
BLIVEN & CARRINGTON, MANUFACTURERS OF LUBRICATING OILS AND GREASES.
NOS. 251, 253 AND 255 FRONT STREET, BETWEEN PECK SLIP AND DOVER STREET.
349
Chas. a. Schieren & Co.
LEATHER BELTING
AND Lace Leather Manufacturers.
CHARLES A. SCHIEREN & CO., of Ferry and Cliff Streets,
New York, are pre-eminent as manufacturers of leather belting and
lace leather. Their factory is considered a model establishment in
its line, because of its improved machinery and economic appliances.
The firm owns a number of patents, granted on inventions by Mr.
Schieren, and under them manufactures such specialties as Electric
and Perforated Belting for use on dynamos and swift-running electric
light machinery ; leather Link Belting, for use in mines and on
machinery exposed to water ; and Planer Belting, suitable for wood-
working machinery. The leather for Planer Belting is tanned with a
view to flexibility and durability. La order to supply its factory with
materials the firm operates its extensive oak leather tanneries at
at Bristol, Tenn., which are in the heart of the oak bark region.
The capacity of these tanneries is 60,000 hides per annum. It also
operates the tannery at Adamsburg, Pa., and Lace Leather tannery
in Brooklyn.
Charles A. Schieren, the founder of the firm, was born in
Rhenish Prussia, in 1842, and with his parents emigrated to this
country in 1856. He had received a public school education in
Germany. In his youth he assisted his father in conducting a cigar and
tobacco business in Brooklyn. In 1864, as clerk he entered the ser-
vice of Philip F. Pasquay, leather Inciting manufacturer of New York.
By virtue of energy and close application he soon mastered the details
of the business, and he became the manager of the establishment, on
the death of his employer, in 1866. Two years later, with limited
means, he set up his own establishment. In 1887 Mr. Schieren admit-
ted as partner F. A. M. Burrell, who had been in his service as clerk
for ten years. The firm has branch houses in Chicago, Boston and
Philadelphia, and the products of its factory are shipped to all parts of
the civilized world. Mr. Schieren was elected Mayor of Brooklyn by
33,000 majority in Nov. '93 for two years. He was one of the founders
of the Hide and Leather National Bank, and is now its Vice-President.
The Leather Belting made by this house comprises every length
and width, and also of heavy and light weights, as their users may
recjuire. Whatever is not carried in general stock can readily be
produced by the house of Charles A. Schieren & Co.
SlCSte-
CHARLEb A. SOHIEREN & CO., LEATHER BELTING AND LACt LEATHER.
Nos. 45 TO 61 FERRY STREET, CORNER OF CLIFF STREET.
PHOTOGR/IPHS
REV yOKK, VIEWS
^ M BUmDINGS
KEPI^ODUCTIONS OF
VOI^KS OF J1I(T M
VIEWS from i.11 parl5 of Ik Vorld
I Ylew gngland G^cist, \\)bite
! 7Vlou"t^i"S' Hudson Riuer,
- - Washington, Philadelphia, j^oston - -
fjjagara, yellowstone parl^
and yo^gemite galley . . .
Ei^nlern 5Iid^5 fl(^de lo OrJer
SoaLE PllOTOGKJlPH f * (PuLIisKers)
neVO YORK RGGRTS
G. P. DUTTen 4= GG.. 3» West 23d St.
CABLE CARS ON THE EAST RIVER BRIDGE,
VIEW OF NEW-YORK END, LOOKING TOWARD NEW YORK.
BROOKLYN BRIDGE PROMENADE.
VIEW LOOKING TO/VARD NEW YORK.
BROOKLYN OR EAST RIVER BRIDGE.
VIEW FROM NEAR THE BROOKLYN LANDING, LOOKING TOWARD NEW YORK.
EAST RIVER -THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE— SOUTH STREET.
SHOWING A PORTION OF NEW YORK'S SHIPPING.
Telephone No. 1740-Coi-tlandt. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Kjrard'mer Jjindin
g
AND
Ml ailing Co nip any.
HUBERT GARDINER, Pres. HENRY C, MILLER, Treas.
NEWSPAPER MAILING AGENCY
AND
PAMPHLET BINDERY,
J
METROPOLITAN REALTY BUILDING,
214-218 William Street (nrXrHnX-,) ^EW YORK.
The largest Pamphlet, Magazine and News-
paper Binding and Mailing Establishment in
this country, equipped with the latest im-
proved machinery for doing work quickly
and at low figures
OUR SPECIALTIES:
Binding and Mailing Newspapers, Magazines, Pamphlets,
Catalogues, etc., etc.
Addressing Envelopes to all Trades and Professions.
3^6
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THE METROPOLITAN REALTY BUILDING.
Nos. 214, 216 AND 218 WILLIAM AND 18 AND 20 ROSE STREETS, FACING BROOKLYN BRIDGE.
Andrew H. Kellogg
PRINTER . ■ . ■
409 to 415 Pearl Street
(Cor. Kew Cliambers and Pearlj
ilCW lOlK Telephone, 2601 Cortlandt
THOROUGHLY EQUIPPED for Hi§:h Grade
Printing:, in all its varied branches,
and especially for the execution of Fine
Catalogue, Book, Magfazine, and Color Work.
Printing: of HALF-TONE ENGRAVINGS
a specialty
CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED FROM
MANUFACTURERS, PUBLISHERS, AND OTHERS
DESIRING FINE PRINTING.
Andrew H. Kellogg
"T
^:.^.
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iff E If f^' ^^^ ii i Pi »
,. I %?,,||i'-'^*r: ]iii«^''5Mm Jill,,!?-.
f'lilliM
ill
I !
,i.
EW^{S4ft»hBE:RS ST
A. H. KELLOGG'S PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT.
SCOTT i BOWNE BUILDINO, ROSE, PEARL AND NEW CHAMBERS STREETS.
359
Boston Belting Co.
JAMES BENNETT FORSYTH
Manufacturing Agent and General Manager
ORIGINAL MANUFACTURERS OF
RUBBER BELTING, HOSE, PACKING, TUB-
ING, GASKETS, VALVES, GARDEN AND
LAWN HOSE, MATS, MATTING, PERFO-
RATED MATS, SPRINGS, WASHERS . . .
256-258-260 DEVONSHIRE ST.
BOSTON
109 MADISON STREET
CHICAGO
100 CHAMBERS STREET
NEW YORK
24 FREMONT STREET
SAN FRANCISCO
360
-a- >
361
Insure in MASSACHUSETTS LIFE Companies
First oe all the BERKSHIRE.
THE LAWS OF MASSACHUSETTS PKOVn)E THAT
EACH POLICY ISSUED BY THE
Berkshire
^
Life Insurance Co.
OF PITTSFIELD, MASS.,
Shall have a D?:FINITE SURREN-
DER VALUE IN CASH, or paid up
insurance available at the end of every
year, after two annual premiums have
been paid.
The policy-holders of the BERK-
SHIRE are, thus, absolutely secured
against any loss.
Every policy issued by the BERK-
SHIRE becomes practically an endow-
ment, with its cash values available at
the time of need.
DO NOT BUY ANYTHING YOU
CANNOT SELL— life insurance policies
included.
The Massachusetts Law fixes the
prices of the BERKSHIRE policies.
No dickering, no uncertainty. Tables
of cash-values endorsed on every policy.
Ascertain what the BERKSHIRE
can do for you.
Correspondence invited ; write, giv-
ing your age, to
GEORGE W. ENGLISH,
Manager for New York
and New Jersey.
253 Broadway, New York.
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3FW '>
Tf'prr 3.
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362
363
Why should we
Patronize the
"POSTAL:"
Because ^m
Its service is prompt and reliable.
It has iie>v lines and modern equip-
ment.
It readies every important commer-
cial point in the imited States and Canada
and connects with the I^EAI>II»JG Atlantic
Cable Company.
It maintains grenuine and as:g:ressive
competition.
The present low rates and j;:ood ser-
vice have been obtained only throug:h
its competition.
I"ublic patronaj^e is essential to the
continued maintenance of competition.
Its employees are intelli}>ent, dilijfent,
energetic and courteous, and their con-
stant efTort is to render the BEST Tele-
Seraph Service.
These are a few of the reasons wliy you
should
^E:]KD your TEI^ICGRAMS by the
"POSTAL"
The POSTAL TELEGRAPH CABLE COMPANY is
NOT a branch of any other Company. It is an independ-
ent Company, maintaining the largest competitive system
ever organized.
IT IS HERE TO STAY.
364
, ■./■.»-^'...'
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RDING & GOOCH, ARCHITECTS.
POSTAL-TELEGRAPH CABLE COMPANY'S BUILDING.
BROADWAY, NORTHWEST CORNER OF MURRAY STREET, FACING CITY HALL PARK.
367
Organized 1829. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Nationalized 1865.
MERCHANTS' EXCHANGE
National Bank
OF THE
CITY OF NEW YORK
No. 257 BROADWAY,
Opposite the City Hall.
INVITES YOUR CORRESPONDENCE AND
SOLICITS YOUR BUSINESS. ITS RECORD
FOR SIXTY- FIVE CONSECUTIVE YEARS
AND ITS UNLIMITED FACILITIES OFFER
YOU ALL THAT IS DESIRABLE IN YOUR
NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT.
OFFICERS.
PHINEAS C. LOUNSBURY, President.
ALLEN S. APGAR, Vice-President and Cashier.
EDWARD V. GAMBIER, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS.
Robert Seaman, E. Christian Korner,
Jesse W. Powers, Lucius H. Biglow,
Allen S. Apgar, John H. Hanan,
Joseph Thomson, Isaac G. Johnson,
Alfred I\L Hoyt, Timothy L. Woodruflf,
Phineas C. Lounsbuiy, Lyman Brown.
James G. Powers, Sandford Hunt,
Alfred J. Taylor.
368
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MERCHANTS' EXCHANGE NATIONAL BANK OF NEW YORK.
No- 257 BROADWAY, WEST SIDE, BETWEEN MURRAY AND WARREN STREETS, OPPOSITE CITY HALL PARK.
/'9
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CITY HALL PARK.
VIEW FROM THE OFFICE WINDOWS OF THE PREFERRED ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO.
By insuring preferred risks only (there-
by reducing the loss to the minimum) an
accident company is enabled to write an
attractive policy that sells readily, and
assures the agent a good profit. The
Preferred Accident Insurance Co. of
New York, 256 and 257 Broadway, New
York City. Kimball C. Atwood, Sec'y.
INSURES PREFERRED RISKS ONLY.
No. 261
BROADWAY. ^^
g^^i^
opposite
City Half and
County Court
House.
e^
C. P. Fraleigh,
A. Wheelwright,
officers:
GEORGE H. BURFORD, President.
•Serretary Wm. T. Standen,
Assistant Secretary Akthur C. Perry,
John P. Minn, Medical Director
Actuary
Cashier
FINANCE committee:
Geo. G. Williams, Prest. Chem. Nat. Bank E. H. Perkins, Jr.
John J. Ticker, .... Builder Pres. Importers' and Traders' Nat. Bank
James R. Plum Leather
directors:
Henry W^Ford, ._ Banker, New York Francis L. Leland, Pres. N. Y. Co. Bank
• Syracuse, N.Y.
Nathan F. Graves, Prest. /
N. Y. State Banking Co.
H. K. Thurber,
Wholesale Grocer, ii6 Reade St.
Henry C. Hulbert, Paper, 53 Beekraan St.
James R. Plum, . Leather, 42 Spruce St.
George G. Williams,
Prest. Chemical National Bank
A. Wallach, Mfg. Jeweler, 32 Maiden Lane
Oliver P. Buel, Counselor, 261 Broadway
E. Van Volkenburgh,
Dry Goods, 62 Worth St.
Charles P. Fraleigh, Sec'y, 261 Broadway
John P. Munn, M.D., . 18 W. 58th St.
George H. Burford, . . President
Alfred S. Heidelbach,
Banker, 29 William St.
Alfred Wheelwright,
Ass't Sec'y, 261 Broadway
E. H. Perkins, Jr.
Prest. Importers' and Traders' Nat. Bank
A. S. Frissell, Prest. Fifth Avenue Bank
John J. Tucker, Builder, 37 W. 12th St.
D. H. Houghtaling,
Importer Tea, 142 Front St.
Thomas Russell,
Cotton Thread, 442 Broadway
Edward P. Steers, Prest. 12th Ward Bank
David J. Dean,
Asst. Corporation Counsel, 2 Tryon Row
Charles E. P.'\tterson,
Counselor, 261 Broadway
John M. Toucev,
Gen'l M'g'r N. Y. C. & H. R. R.R.
W.M. T. Standen, Actuary, 261 Broadway
Solomon W. Albro, Retired, 123 W. 6ist St.
Geo. E. Fisher, . Financier, 63 Wall St.
Donald B. Toucey, Counselor, 261 B'way
THE UNITED STATES LIFE INSURANCE CO.
In the City of New Yorlv,
calls attention to these policies:
THE "CONTINUABLE TERM" POLICY,
(-.iviug the jjreatest possible amount of indemnity against death for the least
po.ssible present cash outlay.
THE "GUARANTEED INCOME" POLICY-
The acme of investment insurance, giving unexcelled guaranteed options, and a
policy that the Company recognizes as valuable collateral security for a loan as
per its own terms.
THE "DEFERRED ANNUITY" POLICY,
Giving the beneficiary an income for a specified term of years, or during his or
her hie ; and removing the danger of loss of the principal, which has often
occurred when large sums have been payable to widows and orphans not versed
in the laws of investment.
^
.T.-4V
v'^^XV^^^
The Spectator Co.
PUBLISHERS AND IMPORTERS OF INSURANCE WORKS.
THE SPECTATOR:
Hn Hmci'ican 'CClcclilv! IRevicw Scvotcti to all bvaucbcs of flnsiuancc. piice, $4 pcv annum.
•Cbc followinij list inclu^c3 some of tbc t.nincij.ial jfhc an^
/lOarinc lUorlis ^nlblisbc^ bv "Cbc Spectator Companv :
Price
The Insurance Year Book $5.00
Fire Insurance Pocket Index 25
Ready Reckoner for Earned and Unearned Premiums 5.00
Improved Expiration Register 3.00
Turner's Ready Reference Ledger 3.00
Hand Book for Fire Insurance Agents 1.50
Zhc followini) list inclu^cs some of tbe principal Xifc an^
Casiialtv lUlorhs publisbc5 big Ubc Spectator Companv; :
Price
The Insurance Year Book $5-oo
Handy Guide to Premium Rates, Applications and
Policies of American Life Companies 2.00
Hand Book of Life and Accident Insurance on tlie
Assessment Plan 2.00
The Assessment Insurance Manual 1.50
Life Agents' Codex 1.50
Principles and Practice of Life Insurance 5.00
Talks with Life Insurance Agents 2.00
A B C of Life Insurance i.oo
Compendium of Official Life Insurance Reports. . . . i.oo
Prominent Patrons of Life Insurance 50
Life Insurance Policy Holders' Pocket Index 25
Pocket Register of Life Associations on the Assess-
ment Plan 25
Pocket Register of Accident Insurance 25
Dividends in Life Insurance 25
The Accident Insurance Manual r.50
The Life Insurance Examiner 3.00
lilso numerous otber valuable Unsurancc 'Cillorhs. Subscriptions
from insurer anJ in5ure^ arc respcctfullv solicitc^. H^^rcs5 :
The Spectator Company,
95 William St., New York City.
THEMICAL BANK. SHOE AND LEATHER BANK. CHAM
BROADWAY, WEST SIDE, FROM CHAMBERS TO MURRAY STREET.
VIEW OF WEST SIDE OF CITY HALL PARK, LOOKING SOUTH FROM CHAMBERS STREET.
S75
Southern
Railway::
Piedmont Air I^ine," A'la "Wasliinjftoii, 1>. C.
SHORTEST, QlTiCKEST ABJD BEST ROUTE
TO AI.E SOlTTHERI»i CITIES AI^iD '\VIl>iTER.
RESORTS.
OperatinsT Eimitefl Vestibule*! Trains from ]Xe^i*-
Vorli in connection with the Pennsylvania R..R.
The System Penetrates the States of "Virginia,
:Piorth and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama,
Mississippi, Tennessee and Kentucky, with its
own rails.
Operating Through Car Service from Nev*' York
to Atlanta, :Ne\v Orleans, St. Augustine, Tampa,
Memphis, Asheville and Hot Springs, Augusta
and Montgomery.
I>ining Cars on Eimited Trains.
Selected by the United States Government to
carry the East Mail between Ne-w York and
JJe-v*' Orleans and Florida.
New York Office
271 Broadway
Corner of Bkoaijway and Chambkks Stkke i
R. D. Carpenthh, General Agent.
Ai.EX. Thweatt, Eastern Pass'r Agent,
GENERAL OFFICES:
WASHINGTON, D. C.
W. H. Green, General Manager.
Jno. M. Gulp, Traffic Manager.
W. A. Turk, Gen'l Pass'r Agent.
376
"America's Greatest Bargain Bookstore.'
CHAMBHRS / %^ A j> SXREEX,
JiJEW nV-^ */ YORK.
I eggat R rothers
BOOKS
Tlie L,ar}j:e»t Stock in America. Tlie l,o>vest Prices.
NE^W AND SECOND-HAND. The seeker after old or
new books, pamphlets, periodicals, old prints, etc., can generalh'
find what he wants at this establishment.
Ne"W Books, it is our fundamental principle to keep all the newest
books as fast as issued by the American or Foreign publishers.
Second -Hand Books. We are buying at all times whole
libraries, parts of libraries and parcels of books covering every
subject, and the buyer of rare and curious publications is always
able to meet most of his wants within our enormous stock.
Catalogues and EiStS furnished to any one on application
by mail or in person. We issue many separate and special cata-
logues, viz.: "Scientific," "Medical," "Sporting," "Theo-
logical," "Literary Cru.mes for the Bookish," "Standard
Authors," " Holiday Books," etc., etc.
JW.ail Orders. We are filling orders constantly from individuals,
firms and libraries, in all parts of the Vvorld, and invite correspond-
ence from every land.
LEGGAX BROTHERS,
8x Chambers St. near Broadway, Ncw York City.
378
THE
Washington Trust Company
OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK.
STHir.IRT BUILDING^
280 Broadway, Xew York,
Capital Stock,
Surplus and Profits,
Deposits, -
Total Assets,
$5oo,ooo.oo
446,142.80
3,296.374.37
$4,248,517.17
"pECEIVES deposits on time, or subject to check
-^V through the New York Clearing House; allows
interest on daily balances, and special rates on deposits
remaining for a fixed period.
Acts as Executor, Administrator, Guardian, Trus-
tee, Receiver, Fiscal and Transfer Agent, and Registrar
of stocks and bonds.
Receives deposits of Trust funds, and for moneys
paid into Court.
- yicc-Ti-csidctits.
DAVID M. MORRISON, Tresideiif.
CHARLES F. CLARK, /
GEORGE AUSTIN MORRISON, f
FRANCIS H. PAGE, Sc'cretjn'.
M. S. LOTT, ^ssislaiil Secretary.
TRUSTEES
CHARLES F. CLARK, Pres. The Bradstreet Co.
DAVID M. MORRISON, late of Morrison & Putnam.
CHARLES H. RUSSELL, of Russell, Poste & Percy.
GEORGE H. PRENTISS, of George H. Prentiss & Co.
JOEL F. FREE.MAN, late Treasurer Standard Oil Co.
GEORGE L. PEASE, Vice-Pres. National Shoe and
Leather Bank.
P. C. LOUNSBUKY, Pres. Merchants' Exchange Na-
tional Bank,
LUCIUS K. WILMERDING, of Wilmerding & Bisset.
JOSEPH C. BALDWIN, Pres. New York and Boston
Dyewood Co.
GEO. AUSTIN MORRISON. Pres. Liberty Ins. Co.
JNO. F, ANDERSON, IK., of Jno. F. Anderson, Ir.
& Co.
WILLIAM LUMMIS, late of Lummis & Day.
GEORGE E. HAMLIN, Pres. Interstate Casualty Co.
SETH E. THOMAS, Treas. Seth Thoma.s Cluck Co.
DAVID B. POWELL, Pres. Nat. City Bank. Brooklyn.
JOHN R. HEGEMAN, Pres. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
WILLIAM WHITING, Pres. Whiting Paper Co., IIoI-
yoke, Mass.
DAN P. EELLS, Pres. Commercial National Bank,
Cleveland, Ohio.
HENRY J. S. HALL, of Hall & Ruckel.
380
THE WASHINGTON TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
No. 280 BROADWAY, STEWART BUILDING, BROADWAY, EAST SIDE, FROM READE TO CHAMBERS STREET.
381
Bradstreet's
A name esteemed throughout the commercial and financial world.
[A Sketch reprinted from " King's Handbook of New York."]
The Bradstreet Company has achieved a wonderful work in relation to
mercantile credit. Society studies into peoples' genealogies and characters ;
the Church examines their creeds and practices ; and the mercantile world
keenl\- scrutinizes their methods and responsibility. If these last named are
worthy to establish credit, they must be reported by human action and personal
judgment. The Bradstreet Company is practically a clearing house for all
classes of information concerning mercantile affairs and mercantile credit,
originated by and intended for business men throughout the world. Its infor-
mation is obtained fromavast number of sources, competent, trustworthy, and
ramifying everywhere, and in such close and confidential touch with The
Bradstreet Company that the result is an immense array of digested facts as to
business men, containing the detailed histories of more than 3,000,000 firms
and individuals in active trade, at home and abroad. The object of search is
the absolute truth as to each mercantile credit, and this is attained by a
consensus of many impartial reports from honorable local observers, who also
note each passing change, and the advance or falling back of the firm or the
individual. With these facts in view, business ma\' be done with intelligence,
and thereby with the reasonable assurance of success, and encouragement for
the enlargement of enterprise and the development of trade.
The massive quarto volumes of more than 2300 pages, which it publishes
four times in every year, contain the estimated worth and recognized credit,
business and address of more than a million of subjects, besides much other
valuable information. Bradstreet's offices nearly compass the earth. That its
mighty mission has been fulfilled with fidelity as to facts, conservatism as to
judgment, and conscientiousness as to details, is proven by a record which
challenges the attention and commands the respect of every person who has
sought information through its channels or availed himself of its facilities for
the investigation of personal credits. The Bradstreet Company is the oldest,
and financially the strongest, organization of its kind working in the one
interest and under one management. It has wider ramifications, with greater
investment of capital, and expending more money every year for the collection
and dissemination of information than any similar institution in the world.
It has long been recognized and practically endorsed by the various de-
partments of the government, as also by the highest local courts of the
United States.
This company publishes, under the name of Uraiht reel's, a sixteen-page
weekly newspaper, which covers the condition of the crops and markets ; and,
dealing as it does, with the news of commerce, finance and manufactures,
'Bradstreet's occupies a unique place. It is impartial and unbiased, and is
quoted the world over as an authority. An active department of this com-
pany's business is the Bradstreet's bindery, which ranks with the most famous
binderies of Paris and London.
The Bradstreet Company has been an important factor in the develop-
ment of the world's commerce for more than forty years, but its pre eminence
began in 1876, under the presidency of Charles F. Clark. The executive and
New-York offices are at 279, 281 and 283 Broadway.
382
383
H. M. ANTHONY,
Nos. lOO and 102 Reade Street,
NEW YORK.
MANUFACTURERS' AGENT FOR
HORSFORD'S ACID PHOSPHATE.
HORSFORD'S ANTI-CHLORINE.
HORSFORD'S CREAM TARTAR.
HORSFORD'S BREAD PREPARATION.
HORSFORD'S BAKING POWDER.
RUMFORD'S YEAST POWDER.
CEREALINE FLAKES, THE NEW FOOD.
STARCH AND CORN FLOUR FOR EXPORT.
STERLING BALL POTASH AND LYE.
LIBBY, McNeill & LIBBY'S CANNED MEATS.
PETALUMA FRUITS IN TINS AND GLASS.
COLUMBIA RIVER SALMON,
Star, Epicure, Beacon, Palm and other Brands.
ALASKA SALMON FOR EXPORT,
Kodiak and other Brands.
384
HENRY M. ANTHONY, MANUFACTURERS' AGENT.
NOS, 100 AND 102 READE STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN CHURCH STREET AMD WEST BROADWAY,
385
ONE OF VAN HOUTEN'S COCOA" ADVERTISEMENTS.
COVER/NG THE ANCIENT AND HISTORICAL BUILDING NORTHEAST CORNER OF WORTH AND HUDSON STREETS,'
i§''^Bff"''"^|!^^ wPj
C. J. VAN HOUTEN & ZOON, MANUFACTURERS VAN HOUTEN'S COCOA.
offices: NOS. loa and IOS READE street, near west BROADWAY.
387
T. L. MARSALIS, President. E. F. CUMING, Treas.
F. W. HOPKINS, VicePres t. W. B. NASH. Secy.
A MERICAN
GROCERY
MANUFACTURERS, . . .
IMPORTERS AND . . .
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
NE\V YORK CITY.
HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KINDvS OF
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC GROCERIES.
HANDLE ALL THE THURBER, WHYLAND CO. BRANDS OF GOODS
West Broadway, Hudson,
Reade and Duane Streets.
Cable Address
P. O. Box 1013. "Amgroco" New York.
388
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THE POTTER-PARLIN COMPANY, MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS.'
Nos. 176 AND 178 DUANE STREET, EXTENDING THROUGH TO READE STREET.
STREET FRONT.
THE POTTER-PARLIN COMPANY, MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS.
Nos, 176 AND 178 DUANE STREET, EXTENDING THROUGH TO READE STREET.
Columbia
* Bicycles
HIGHEST QUALITY OF ALL.
/;?-'i^<
TJaVE you feasted your eyes upon the
-■• -*■ beiiuty and grace of the 1895 Cokim-
bias ? Have you tested and compared them
with ah othci- makes ? Only by such test-
ing can you know how fully the Columbia
justities its proud title of the "Standard for
the World." Any model or equipment
■-^/^your taste may require — all $100.
POPE MFG. CO.
General Offices & Factories, HARTFORD, Conn.
Boston, iW'io Yor/c,
Cliicago, San Francisco.,
^ Providence, Buffalo.
'*t An Art Catalogue
2 (if lliese famous wheels free at any Columbia asjency,
^ or will be mailed for two 2-cent stamps.
At
•J
Rothschild Building
LEONARD vSTREET, N. E- COR. OF WEST BROADWAY
NEW YORK
npHIS handsome Office and Salesroom Building is now read\' for occupancy.
Its location is in the centre of the Dry Goods District, and but a few
steps from the Franklin Street Elevated R. R. Station. This is important,
as from this station during the busy hours of the day special empty trains
are dispatched at frequent intervals.
Tlnere are two Kntrarices: one on Leonard Street and
one on West Broadway; and four speedy Otis Elevators to carry pas-
sengers to all parts of the building. The entrances, as well as the
corridors throughout the building, aie spacious and are paved with
marble and French tiling.
J- he EBllllcling is fitted up with every convenience, such as Elec-
tric and Gas Eights, Toilet Rooms, and Filtered Ice Water on each
floor. Cutler U. S. mail-chute, etc., etc.
Tine Offices and Salesrooms are light, airy and
cheerful, and can be had singly or cii suite. They will be divided to suit
tenants without extra charge.
Valuable DisiDlay ancl Advertisement
can be had from the windows of the West Broadway offices, on account
of their close proximity to the Elevated R. R. and the Elevated Station.
Parties desiring choice of rooms are advised to make application at once.
Offices will be kept thoroughly clean, and tenants will be shown every atten-
tion. The rents are low and include everything.
For further particulars, apply at the offices of
V. Henry Rothschild & Co.
ROTHSCHILD BUILDING.
-->■«■
-< — V— K-, I .:_ — 5 ft ^E^A,,
— ^j I iF^ /f ^*^^^
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TO PROTECT YOUR BANK ACCOUNTS.
»*123I+5C7U00$*
(Sample of Work )
THE ONLY SYSTEM USED
BY THE UNITED STATES TREASURY, POST-OFFICE AND WAR DEPARTMENTS.
Banks are not responsible for RAISED CHECKS.
United States Check Punch Co.
18 Broadway, New York.
W. D. ELGER, Th!
ASURER AND MANAGER,
396
FRANCIS H. LEGGETT & GO'S WHOLESALE GROCERY WAREHOUSE.
FRANKLIN STREET, FROM WEST BROADWAY TO VARICK STREET.
397
WM. Y. BOGLE ALEXANDER SCOTT.
BOGl^E & $COTT.
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF
F^ancij Crocene$,
AND HIGH-GRADE
CANNED GOODS.
HUDSON AND NORTH MOORE k , ,- » . , x x x-v r^ ■ ,
STREETS NEW YORK.
398
BOGLE & SCOTT, FANCY GROCERIES AND CANNED GOODS.
No. 120 HUDSON STREET, EAST SIDE, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF NORTH MOORE STREET.
399
EXHIBIT OF MAX AMS AT THE WORLD'S FAIR IN 1893, IN CHICAGO.
MAX AMS,
Maniilacturer <>1
FRUIT PRESERVES, MUSTARD, PRESERVED
FISH and CAVIAR .
Iiii|><>rt<>r and ra«-U«'r of
HERRINGS, RUSS. SARDINES, ANCHOVIES,
SPECIALTIES in SMOKED and PRES. FISH
DELICACIES.
Wholesale l»t'aler in ami Exporter of"
FRESH and FROZEN STURGEON, EELS, SAL-
MON and CAVIAR.
372-374 Greenwich St.
NEW YORK.
MAX AMS, MANUFACTURER, PACKER AND IMPORTER.
Nos. 372 AND 374 GREENWICH STREET, WEST PIOE, BETWEEN FRANK( IN AND NORTH MOORE STREETS.
'-M ^14
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Ir\ CKe^mpcvdrxe Bottler
vPlNlT5^rJD QUAK.T5
VlISl D^ POMMC
Ur\FerrT\2r\tzd £kpple Jvjice- .
"Mop -Tonic Ale
Er\rfli<.K Bfcuyad
Equinox SpmNoWATED.
best of" 0.1' Te^blc Wcitzrc,
Bottled LfitK Ns-turtvl Oa-c, at iKz ^pr'ir\<^.
Mt Equirxox MarNcKeCjtei- VL
CquinoxOinoed. Champagne
*svipenoi' to o.r\y lrr\porLt'd Gm.dci' -Ale,
GENESEE FRUIT COMPANY
501 West St. New York.
Pint ^ai-Tjp/e sent prepaid on receipt of ten J' %tamps.
406
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GENESEE FRUIT COMPANY, CIDERS, VINEGARS AND BEVERAGES.
No, S01 WEST STREET, CORNER OF JANE STREET.
PTUHL RESERVE FUHD LIFE USSOGiPTiOK.
E. B. HARPER,
President.
"FOUNDED UPON A ROCK"
"' A/id when the flood arose, the stream beat vehemently upon that
house, and could not shake it, for it was founded upon a rock. ' '
C^C\ PER CENT. DIVIDEND C^C\
yj\J SAVED IN PREMIUMS. \J\J
The total cost for the past 13 years for
$10,000 insurance in the Mutual Reserve
amounts to less than Old System Companies
charge for $4,500 at ordinary life rates —
the saving in premrums being equal to a
cash dividend of nearly 60 per cent.
35
MILLION DOLLARS
SAVED IN PREMIUMS
35
The Mutual Reserve, by reducing the
rates to harmonize with the amount required
for Death Claims, and by judicious economy
in e.xpenses of management, has already
saved its policy holders over thirty-five
million dollars in premiums.
1881.
THE ELOQUENCE OE RESULTS.
No. of POLICIES IN FORCE, over
INTEREST INCOME. ANNUALLY, EXCEEDS
BI-MONTHLY INCOME EXCEEDS
RESERVE EMEIU;ENCY FIND EXCEEDS
DEATH CLAIMS I»AID, OVFR .
NEW BUSINESS IN 1S<»3, OVER
NEW BUSINESS, .lANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1S9I,
INSURANCE IN FORCE EXCEEDS
1804.
85,000
$130,000
7.50,000
3,820,000
20,600,000
«4,000.000
70,346,730
280,000,000
THE RESERVE FUND PROTECTED.
The Reserve, Emergency, Fund is hkld in trust for the policy-
holders by the Central Trust Company of New York, and other reliable
corporations, and Departments appointed by Government.
E^" Not a single dollar of the accumulated or invested reserve fund has
ever been used or required either for the payment of death losses or for any
other purpose.
EXCELLENT POSITIONS OPEN
in its Agency Department in every Town, City and State, to experienced and
successful business men, who will find the Mutual Reserve the very best
Association they can work for.
Further information supplied by any of the Managers, General or Special
Agents in the United Slates, Canada, Great Britain or Europe.
Home Office, cor. Broadway ami Duaiie St., New Yorii,
.fo9
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W I- HUME AHCHlTtCT.
MUTUAL RESERVE FUND LIFE ASSOCIATION.
MUTUAL RESERVE BUILDING, BROADWAY, NORTHWEST CORNER OF DUANE STREET.
4oq
TOWER PiPPFIlGTUIiijII} k PVELTY CO.,
306 & 308 BROADWAY, N. Y. CITY.
Stationery and Stationers Specialties.
HEADQUARTERS FOR
TOWER'S BANK PEN HOLDERS,
TOWERS WORLD FAIR TOOTHPICKS,
TOWER'S WOODEN TOOTHPICKS,
TOWER'S MULTIPLEX ERASIVE RUBBER,
TOWER'S FOUNTAIN PENS,
PAUL OS AUTOMATIC PAPER,
FASTENER AND BINDER.
PRINTING, ENGRAVING, LITHOGRAPHING, BLANK BOOKS.
THE FHflKKLU TYPEWBITEB
Perfect in Simplicity, Duraliility, Alijjsisssetit, Siieed,
Visible "Writing:, Portability, Manifolding:, Xype-
Cleaning:, Ribbon-Ctianjfing: and Repairingr^a g^reat
time saver.
A STANDARD MACHINE.
PHIGE \\m
Cam. to sf.f. the " Franklin. " Send i-or Circilar Descriptions.
TOWER HlflHUFIlCTURlNI} k PVELTY CO.,
BROADWAY AND DUANE STREET, NEW YORK.
tU/VER MANUFACTURING AND NOVtLlY CO. AND THt f-RANKLIN TYPEWRITER.
NjS. .106 AND 308 B'iOADW^Y, NORTHEAST CORNER OF DUANE STREET.
BULKLEY, DUNTON & Co.,
PAPER
MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS,
75 & 77 DuANE Street,
DAVID G. GARABRANT,
r.HrJ:l.%l\\T' NEW YORK.
BULKLEY, DUNTON & CO., PAPER MANUFACTURERS.
Nos. 76 AND 77 DUANE STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN ELM STREET AND BROADWAY.
Established i86^.
THE CENTRAL
NATIONAL BANK
OF THE CITY OF
NEVS^ YORK,
320 AND 322 Broadway, North-east Corner of Pearl Street.
Capital and Surplus, exceed - - - - $2,5oo,ooo.oo
Deposits, ---------- t5. 000,000.00
EDWIN LANCtDON, President.
C. S. Young, Cashier. Lkwis S. Lke, Ass't Cashier.
DIRECTORS.
WH.LIAM A. WlIKKLoCK, JAMES H. DUNHAM, JOHN CLAFLIN,
SIMON BERNHKIMER, EDWIN LANGDON, JOHN A. MCCAI.L,
WILLIAM L. STRONG, WOODBURY LANGDON, COURTLANDT D- MOSS,
EDWARD C. SAMPSON, HENRY TUCK.
CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK OF NEW YORK.
NOS. 320 AND 322 EROADWAY, NORTHEAST CORNER OF PEARL STREET.
Tefft, Weller & Co.
Wholesale Dry Goods Merchants.
[Reprinted from " King's Handbook of New York City."']
TKFFT, WELLER & CO., importers and jobbers of dry goods, of 326, 32S and 330
Broadway, is one of the oldest and most widely esteemed houses in the wholesale
dry-goods trade. Its members have been prominently identified with public
intere.sts for the past fortj^ years. This busine.ss was founded January i, 1849, by
Erastus T. Tefft ; and the firm name has been successivelj-, E. T. Tefft & Co ; Teffts, Gris-
wold & Kellogg; Tefft, Griswold & Co.; and Tefft, Weller & Co. Through all these
changes the house has been steadily advancing, enlarging its trade in all directions, and
increasing its capital, facilities and force, as well as its experience. Its fovnider was a rare
man. He was a man of quick perceptions and sound judgment. He was eminently just
in all his ways. He was of a conservative disposition, yet was bold, courageous and daring
when the occasion demanded these qualities. He was uniformly courteous, kind and
gentle, and commanded the confidence and respect of all who knew him. Mr. Tefft died
November 10, 1888, at the venerable age of 78 years.
The present firm is composed of his two sons, William E. Tefft and Frank Griswold
Tefft, George C. Clarke, John N. Beach and Morton D. Bogue. The firm name of Tefft,
Weller & Co. is retained as a trade-mark ; there having been no Weller interests in the
house since the death of Joseph H. Weller in 1886, two years previous to the death of E. T.
Tefft. The firm occupies the entire seven floors of the spacious iron and granite-front
building at 326, 328 and 330 Broadway, and three floors of No, 324, together with two floors
of Nos. 320 and 322, making in the aggregate 166,250 square feet of floor space These vast
areas are occupied by very full lines of the goods in which the house deals, admirably
arranged and ordered. The Incation of Tefft, Weller & Co.'s buildings, on the east side of
Broadway, between Pearl and Worth Streets, is in the midst of the great wholesale dry-
goods trade.
The business of the house is thoroughly .systematized, each partner giving to it his
personal attention, in some special direction. The employees in all the depi^rtments
number about four hundred and fifty.
A large and well-assorted stock is kept at all seasons, comprising foreign and domestic
dress goods, silks, velvets, hosiery, notions, white goods, linens, laces, shawls, cloaks,
woolens, flannels, blankets, prints, ginghams, domestics, and an unusually large variety
of carpets and mattings, floor oilcloths and upholstery goods.
Acting not as commission merchants, but as direct traders, dealing with the chief man-
ufacturers both at home and abroad, Tefft, Weller & Co. have peculiar advantages for the
safe and favorable conduct of their business, and for its indefinite expansion, whenever
occasion arises therefor. The choice.st products of the European looms and workshops are
found in their vast stocks, as well as the output of hundreds of American factories, favored
by the new birth of industrial activity in the United States.
Tefft, Weller & Co enjoy facilities for .securing every possible advantage in the pur-
chase of goods, both in home and foreign markets, and are always in a position to take
excellent care of their customers — a fact which, judging from their constantly growing
business, the trade njipreciate.
TEFFT, WELLER & CO.,
320, 322, 32.1, 326, 328 ajid 3,i-:> Broad'niay, East Siifr,
bettvt-iii Pearl anil Wort/! Streets.
416
TEFFT, WELLER & CO., WHOLESALE DRY GOODS.
NOS. 320, 322, 324, 326, 328 AND 330 BROADWAY, EAST SIDE, BETWEEN PEARL AND WORTrl STREETS.
27 417
GARNER & CO., DRY GOODS COMMISSION.
No. 10 WORTH STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN HUDSON STREET AND WEST BROADWAY.
418
SMITH, HOGG & GARDNER, DRY GOODS COMMISSION.
MERCANTILE REAL ESTATE GO'S BUILDING, 115 AND 117 WORTH STREET, CORNER OF ELM STREET.
ft.
^\v%
MMOTljiiirriii
'^:iiiii!p.iimiii!iTniiii| 1 lirr'll I
^*W
THE NEW-YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY.
BROADWAY, SOUTHEAST CORNER OF LEONARD STREET. VIEW SHOWING PROPOSED NEW FRONT ON
3£staW^ebc^ ISiH.
= 1lncol•pol•atc^ li5S0.
Mayor, Lane & Co.
128, 130 AND 132 WHITE STREET,
Factory: 42 and 44 MOTT STREET,
NEW YORK,
Manufacturers of and Dealers in
Plumbers' Steam and Gas Fitters' Supplies.
BRASS FOUNDERS, LEAD PIPE MANUFACTURERS.
PATENTEES OF THE IMPROVED COMBINATION
NEEDLE BATHS.
^^ho 'HVlainifjclurcn of
The Improved Home Turko-Russian Folding Bath Cabinet.
Portable, and can be used In any room. Dry Steam, Vapor Oxygen, Medi-
cated and Perfumed Baths, Sure Cure for Colds, Rheumatism, etc., prevents
contract ingdisease, insures a heal thy, clear complexion, and prevents obesity.
UAIH CAllINkI ol b.N.
HATH rABINKT CLOSED.
Manufacturers of Douches, Sprays and Bathing Appliances
SKND FOR DESCKIF'in'E CIRCi'LAK.
MAYOR, LANE & CO., PLUMBERS', STEAM AND UAS FITTERS' bUHHLltt>.
, 128, 130 AND 1.!2 WHITE STREET, NORTH SIDE, EETWEFN CENTRE AND BAXTER STREETS.
LANSING'S
c^) Lower Railway Fares
-^j^ Lower Steamboat Fares
^f
ei
Lower Ocean Steamer
Fares
50,000 ROUTES to choose from.
PURCHASES AND EXCHANGES NEC^OTIATED
UPON MOST FAVORABLE TERMS.
A CONVENIENT WAITING ROOM FOR LADIES.
BERTHS SECURED. BAGGAGE CHECKED.
WRITE FOR INFORMATION AND RATES.
Gustav. G. Lansing,
397 Broadway, New York.
9
7
397
Uhjsi
,^AI
MG'
397I
f^EAM'I^AY
y*
LANSING'S RAILWAY AND STEAMSHIP TICKET OFFICE.
No. 397 BROADWAY, WEST SIDE, BETWEEN WHITE AND WALKER STREETS.
THE
Ninth National Bank
OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
Ninth National
Bank Buildinfj
Nos. 407 and 409 BROADWAY
RESOURCES. November 17, 1894. LIABILITIES.
Loans and Discounts,
$3,726,459.40
Capital Stock,
$750,000.00
Banking House, .
450,000.00
Surplus and Profits,
. 384,134-91
Due from Banks,
687,591.74
Circulation,
44,350.00
Checks for Clearing
House,
Cash, .
294,664.69
1,562,758.47
Deposits,
5,542,989.39
$6,721,474.30
$6,721,474.30
H. H. NAZRO, Cashier.
JOHN K. CILLEY, President.
DIRHCXORS.
JOHN K. CILLEY, President.
ALBERT C. HALL,
of Alvah Hall & Co., Umbrellas.
WILLIAM E. TEFFT,
of Tefft, Waller & Co., Dry Goods.
AUGUSTUS F. LIBBY,
of H.J. Libby & Co.,Com'sion Dry Goods
ERNEST WERNER,
of Joseph & Werner, Commission Woolens
WILLIAM E. ISELIN,
of Wm. Iselin & Co., Importers Dry Goods
ADDISON C. RAND,
President of the Rand Drill Co.
HIRAM H. NAZRO, Cashier.
426
NINTH NATIONAL BANK OF NEW YORK.
NOS. 407, 409 AND 411 BROADWAY, WEST SIDE, BETWEEN WALKER AND LISPENARD STREETS.
Calhoun,RobbinsS:C^.
Nos. 4:10 and -412 Broadw^ay,
NEW YORK,
IMTORTHRS AND JOBBERS OF
Fancy Dry Goods
AND
Small Wares.
TRIMMINGS, LACES, BRAIDS, BUTTONS,
DECORATIVE SILKS and ART GOODS,
RIBBONS, SILKS ami SATINS.
EANS, COMBS and JEWELRY,
PERFUMERY^ BAGS and BELTS,
WHLTE GOODS, DRESS LININGS,
LADIES' NECKWEAR, Etc.
CALHOUN, ROBBINS & CO., WHOLESALE FANCY DRY GOODS.
Nos. 396 AND 398 BROADWAY, EAST SIDE, BETWEEN WALKER AND CANAL STREET$.
WHAT DR. CUYLER THINKS OF PARKINSON.
"Dear Parkinson: I enclose aJ^6 to the Prince of
Photographers.
Yotirs gratefully,
THEO. L. CUYLKR.
"JSTo man has ever produced for nie any Photos eqttal
tc votirs. Success he with you!"
PARKINSON, 239 Broadway, N. Y.
Elevator, No. 1 P^ y<2yteje^ cri^ci^
ESTABLISHED 1860.
THEY POSSESS THE
Five Essential Points
FOR SUPERIORITY.
A-1 QUALITY OF METAL,
EXPERT WORKMANSHIP,
UNIFORMITY,
DURABILITY,
% PERFECT ACTION.
Sample card, containing f^ive pens,
th.e leading nuimibers, sent on
receipt of 2 cent staivip
for return postage
Spencerian Pen Co., new york city.
458
THE SPENCERIAN PEN COMPANY.
MO. 460 BROOME STREET, NORTHEAST CORNER OF MERCER STREET.
ESTABLISHED 1865.
PHILO L. MILLS. WILLIAM T. EVANS. JOHN GIBB.
Mills &Grbb,
IMPORTERS OF
LACES, EMBROIDERIES, WHITE GOODS, LINENS,
HANDKERCHIEFS, SILKS, RIBBONS, CRAPES,
NOTIONS, BUTTONS, TRIMMINGS, CORSETS,
HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR, KNIT GOODS,
GLOVES, CURTAINS, ETC., ETC.
BROADWAY AND GRAND ST.
NEW YORK.
BRANCH HOUSES :
BOSTON, PHILADELPHIA, BALTIMORE, CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS,
ST, PAUL, SAN FRANCISCO.
460
461
St. Jolm-Kirkham Shoe Co.
NEW YORK CITY,
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in
: BOOTS, SHOES :
.-AND RUBBERS:
FOR FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC TRADE.
FACTORIES AT
NORTH ABINGTON, Mass.
NORTH ADAMS,
NORTH BROOKFIKI.D, " [■ Scud for Catalogue.
ORANGE,
DOVER, New Hampshire.
St. John-Kirkham Shoe Co.
134 AND 136 GRAND STREET,
. NEW YORK.
462
ST. JOHN-KIRKHAM SHOE COMPANY.
N08. 134 AND 136 GRAND STREET, NORTHEAST CORNER OF CROSBY STREET.
463
CHARLES BROADWAY ROUSS,
54Q, 551 & 553 Broadway, New York.
PARIS BERLIN VIENNA CHEMNITZ
NOTTINGHAM .... YOKOHAMA.
ROUSS BUILDING.
F1.00RS.
ist. Packing Room and Surplus Stock.
2d. Carpets, Upholstery, Shades.
3d. Main Floor, Piece Goods, Woolens.
4th. Office, Millinery, Jewelry.
5th. Linens, Laces and White Goods.
6th. Notions, Corsets, Japanese Goods.
7th. Hosiery, Gloves, Kid and Fabric.
8th. Stationery, Books.
9th. Hardware, Cutlery, Tinware,
loth. Clothing, Cloaks, Gent's Furnishing,
iith. Shoes, Paintings, Art,
i2th. Hats, Umbrellas, Parasols.
CHARLES BROADWAY ROUSS.
464
CHARLES BROADWAY ROUSS, GENERAL MERCHANDISE «i-.lj mo i IONS.
ROUSS BUILDING, Nos. 549. 651 AND 55:3 BROADWAY, WEST SIDE, BETWEEN SPRING AND PRINCE STREETS.
■.HI 405
Charles I. Freedman.
MoRiTZ Freedman,
±
BROS.
NIANTJKACTURERS OK
LADIES'
CLOAKS ^*° SUITS
T
565 and 567 Broadway
SOUTH-WEST CORNER OF PRINCE STREET
New York City
456
t
E
j
I
r ffjli
FREEDMAN BROTHERS, MANUFACTURERS AT WHOLESALE OF CLOAKS AND SUITS.
Nos. S65 AND 567 BROADWAY, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF PRINCE STREET.
467
John Ca$$idij,
Blank Book Manufacturer,
AND
Printer, Stationer, Lithooraplier, Etc,
rAFER RlTI^IBiG, I»AGI?«G, I*ilIItIBH«ING, I»EIt.KORATITStG,
rVPUCHINO, EYEl.EXXII«itG, ETC.
Magazines, Sheet Music and all kinds of Books Bound to Order.
Neiv York Agent for serving the Philadelphia Patent Flat
Ope7iing Book, zchieh received a Medal at the
American Institute Fair, Dec. lo, i8()2.
^WORK DOTVE FOR THE TRADE.
Special I^ow Prices to Printers, Stationers and, Booltbinders.
.... Estimates Clieerfully Given ....
JOHN CASS ID Y.
221,233 & 223 Fulton St., New York Citi)
3?^34r^V
^n:^' > -^ - \\
2^1'
JCLjI iJLJ_jr rf«-LJ /,
eu jmu imu ji
mujs. '"^^ im_* j(..a_jF jf«jk.7
/mn^ ftaj-a / c t t*^.
-i_,^'5^
f ; f R! ff r^-^;
469
A superb new vohifne for every home.
Worthy of the heartiest support and most liberal patronage.
KING'S
TENTH
Handbook oj Boston.
THE IDEAL CITY OF AMERICA.
All absolutely new volume from cover to cover, showing Boston
in its contemplated development, as understood by
"Greater Boston."
More than One Thousand Handsome Pages, printed on super-
fine paper.
More than One Thousand Original Photographic Engravings.
Substantially bound in exquisite cloth and gold binding .
An interesting history and elaborate description, very profusely
illustrated.
A popular price of Two Dollars a cop y.
The most elaborate book of its class ever made for any city
in the world.
"Good enough for anybody. Cheap enough for everybody."
MOSES KING, Editor and Publisher, BOSTON.
"King's Handbook of New York,"
"King's Handbook of the United States,"
Etc., Etc.
' )-\m* ' - % \ -^
ji' ^-^sz-i:
'■■^7
I-
r. A. FERRIS & COMPANY.
AMERICA'S WORLD-FAMOUS PACKING ESTABLISHMENT.
[From " King's Handhook cjf Nkw York.'" J
F. A. Terris & Coiiii)any, whose name is a household word in the homes of this
nation, are conducting a gigantic business that was begun three-quarters of a century ago.
In 1818, a stout German lad of nineteen years landed from a sailing vessel, and walked up
Broadway without a penny in his pocket. Industry, integrity and economy soon enabled
this newcomer, John J. Cape, to start a little provision shop, and so well did he prosper that
when he was fifty years of age he retired from active business with a comfortable fortune.
He took pride, however, in having his name remain in the succeeding firm of F. A. Ferris &
Company until the day of his death. Through all the exacting war times and wonderful
commercial changes since that day, the firm has steadily kept on its way, extending its
business to every part of the world that imports fine provisi ins from the United States, at all
times laying as the foundation of further success the crowding of their product towards
absolute perfection. One of their maxims which has a popular ring, has become known to
all Americans —
" A little higher
in price, but !"
I heir establ is h -
ment, 262, 264,
j66, 2A8, 270 and
_72 Mott Street,
a plain, but sub-
stantial brick,
s t one- trimmed
business building
without, shows
within a most in-
teresting combi-
nation of all that
science and expe-
rience have
Uiught concern-
ing the fine cur-
ing and smoking
iii hams and
bacon. The in-
tricate processes
of changing the
fresh meats by
what is known as
"curing" into
the smoked hams and bacon which can stand shipment to any ordinary climate, now depend
fundamentally upon the production of cold by artificial means. One of the most charming
machinery rooms of the country is found in their fire-proof building, where they have in
duplicate the Pontifex Refrigerating Plant. The March, 1893, number of Scribner's Maga-
zine, in an article entitled "Some Notable Food Products," gives a lucid description of the
wonderful work accomplished by this mechanical system. The Ferris Building, standing
on the back-bone of the lower part of New- York island, has three stories of cellars (excava-
tions having been made thirty feet below the curb through a bed of fine cut sand and gravel),
thus adding immensely to the storage capacity of the firm. It can justly be said that in the
preparation of meat-foods this is a model establishment. The opposite page shows the
Mott Street front of the packing establishment of F. A. Ferris & Company.
M;
jftm
'11 '
■ r
PONTIFEX REFRIGERATING APPARATUS USED BY F. A. FERRIS i COMPANY.
n^
..'r'
,# -^
^
«
***
11^
1*^*
fiM-iM^--^' -,^,, 1.^. ^'^ -"^-^
1
F. A. FERRIS & COMPANY PACKING ESTABLISHMENT.
MOTT STREET, EAbT SIDE, BETWEEN HOUSTON AND FRINGE STREETS.
IQrsJinslow'sSootDi Syrup,
FOR CHILDREN WHILE
CUTTING THEIR TEETH.
AN OLD AND WELL-TRIED REMEDY FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS.
por
1^3.—
Jeetl?ir><$
*.
P^'HlNC S^^
O^
MRS. WINSLOWS SOOTHTNG SYIIITP has been used for over Fifty Years by millions
of mothers for their children while TEETHING with perfect success. It soothes the child,
softens the gums, allays all pain ; cures Wind Colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea.
Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Re sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's
Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. TWENTY-FIVE CENTS A BOTTLE.
BOW BRIDGE,
CENTRAL PARK.
THE BLEECKER STREET BUILDING OF THE O. B. POTTER TRUST.
BLEECKER STREET, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF WOOSTER STREET.
475
THE
•MAP
NKW YORK CITY
ATTACHED
TO THIS PAGE
WAS ENGRAVED FOR
THE
Broadway C^^itral Hotel
BROADWAY, OPPOSITE BOND STREET,
TII^I^Y HAYNES, - - Proprietor.
IF IT IS MISSING WRITE TO THE
. . HOTEL FOR ANOTHER COPY . .
476
d
»?«'
CENTRAL. GRACE CHURCH.
BROADWAY CENTRAL HOTEL, TILLY HAYNES, PROPRIETOR.
NOS. 673 TO 681 BROADWAY, BETWEEN BLEECKER AND THIRD STREETS, OPPOSITE BOND STREET.
477
- 1845 -
HALF
A
CENTURY
1895
Hornthal,Weissman&Co.
MANUFACTURERS OF FINE GRADES OF
Ready Made Clothing
FOR MEN'S WEAR
WITH AN ESTABLISHED REPUTATION OF 50 YEARS
ALL GARMENTS FROM THEIR WORKROOMS
ARE EQUAL I IM EVERY RESPECT TO THOSE
FROM MERCHANT TAILORS
Hornthal, Weissman & Co.
670 to 674 BROADWAY
Northeast cor. Bo nd Street NEW YORK
Geo. Borgfeldt & Co.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
18, 20, 22 Washington Place (a^^^nl,), New York.
PARIS, 43 Rue tie Paradis. SOUNGEN, 3 Casernen Sir.
BERLIN, 48 Ritier Slrasse. BOD EN BACH, near Bahnhof.
FUERTH. 32 Konigswarter Sir. STOKE-ON-TRENT, 36 Glebe Street.
SONNEBERG. Thuringia. LIMOGES. France.
"TROLLS, Toys (Imported and Domestic), China,
(jiassware, Bric-a-Brac, Rich Cut Glass. Fancy
Furniture, Notions, Fancy Goods, vStationery, Drug-
gists' Sundries, Surgical Instruments, Hard and
Soft Rubber Articles, Cutlery, House Furnishing and
Kitchen Goods, Confectioners" Sundries, Musical
Instruments, Jewelry, Clocks, and complete lines
of Japanese China, and Fancy (loods.
Geo. Borgfeldt & Co.
1 8, 20, 22 Washington Place (,;,fE°';'^p''sT.), New York.
480
'\
%4„
d^m^
li.llii.
^ '^ w,; b; ii
iiiiliieii^iiiiil
1 I
l''Mlllj|ii:iiiiniiil' .
E^j- 1'- p - wm^^i -
GEORGE BORGFELDT & CO., IMPORTING COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
WASHINGTON PLACE, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF GREENE STREET.
A Tonic
For Brain-Workers, the W^eak and
Debilitated.
Horsford's Acid Phosphate
is without exception the Best
Remedy for relieving Mental
and Nervous Exhaustion ; and
where the system has become
debilitated by disease, it acts as
a general tonic and vitalizer,
affording sustenance to both
brain and body.
Dr. E. Cornell Hsteii, Philadel-
phia, Pa., says: "I have met with the
greatest and most satisfactory results
in dyspepsia and general derangement
of the cerebral and nervous systems,
causing debility and exhaustion."
Descriptive pamplilet free.
lluiuford Chemical AVorks, I'rovitlenoe, R, I.
Beware of Substitutes and Imitations.
482c
WASHINGTON MEMORIAL ARCH.
WASHINGTON SQUARE, BEGINNING OF FIFTH AVENUE. JUDSON MEMORIAL CHURCH SHOWS THROUGH THE ARCH.
^ -■
••;
JEFFERSON MARKET POLICE COURT.
SIXTH AVENUE, WEST SIDE, FROM GREENWICH AVENUE TO 10TH STREET.
484
>i,*
1 *.. e
' " J. k 'fry "^
.'^ '?*. ■^■^ i , "^^
485
• Established 1844.
M. H. MALLORY & CO.
PUBLISHERS.
Tlh' Cli II rcli limit's Diiildiii^:.
THE BROADWAY BUILDING OF THE O. B. POTTER TRUST.
Nos 806 AND 808 BROADWAY, EAST SIDE, ABOVE GRACE CHURCH, ADJOINING GRACE CHURCH RECTORY.
499
James McCreery & Co.
Broadway and Eleventh Street,
NEW YORK CITY.
T/TTZEJ ijzj^ite tJze ctttentioTX of ozzt-of-toTs^Tz
hiiyers to otlv Lcu^ge, ctttj^ctctive stock of
Stupes, T^elj^ets, Dress Groods, Laces, Trtnx-
mzTzgs, Indict SKcuwZs, Hosiery , G-loves,
ZTplzolsterjj Goods, Saits, ^Vrctps, CltildreTi'S
Ouitftts CLTid HocLselx.eejDing Q-oods.
Correspondence from an\- part of the United States will receive
prompt attention, and orders by mail or by express will be filled
without delav.
James McCreery & Co.
Broadway s' Eleventh St., New York.
GUSTAV E. STECHERT,
IMPORTER OF
BOOKS ^PERIODICALS
8io BROADWAY, NEW YORK,
TWO DOORS ABOVE GRACE CHURCH.
BRANCHES :
London, 30 Wellington st., strand, w.c. Paris, 76 rue de rennes
Leipzig, hospital str., 10.
GUSTAV E. STECHERT, BOOKS AND PERIODICALS.
NO. 810 BROADWAY. EAST SIDE, BETWEEN GRACE CHURCH AND 12rH STREET.
ESTABLISHED 1848.
B. WE8TERMANN I GO.
(LEMCKE & BUECHNER)
(LONDON, LEIPZIG, PARIS)
812 BROADVS/AV, NKW YORK
PUBLISHERS AND IMPORTERS OF
German, English and French
g OOKS and PERIODICA LS
Xai-gcst Stocft of ©crman, Jfrcncb an^ Eiuilisb JBoohs. 'Cbe Classics,
©tctionarics an& tSi-ammars in all Xaiuuiacjcs. Bmcrican 36oof!S at
Xowcst '(Rates. Catalotjucs on Biiplication.
For nearly fifty years our firm has furnished books of every description
and in any language— American and foreign— and saved those of its patrons
much trouble and the annoyance of a multiplicity of accounts, who have placed
all their orders for books and periodicals in our hands. By long experience
and a most complete bibliographical apparatus we are prepared promptly to
answer all inquiries as to prices, editions and the extant literature on any given
subject. A successful business existence of over forty-seven years is a guaran-
tee of satisfactory attention to all demands upon us, and orders for single
copies or a whole library are attended to with the same promptness. Our
facilities are unsurpassed. Our foreign offices at London, Leipzig and Paris
are in experienced and careful hands.
B. WESTER MANN &. CO., NEW YORK.
B. WESTERMANN & CO., [LEMCKE & BUECHNER] FOREIGN BOOKS AND PERIODICALS.
No. 812 BROADWAY, EAST SIDE, JUST NORTH OF GRACE CHURCH.
Richard E, Thibaut.
All Kinds of
U/all papers,
52 E. i3TH STREET.
DIRECTLY WEST OF BROADWAY.
A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF THE
NEWEST OF STYLES AND
COLORINGS CONSTANTLY : :
ON HAND. :::::::
SAMPLES FURNISHED WITH PLEASURE.
YOUR PERSONAL INSPECTION INVITED.
RICHARD E. THIBAUT.
52 EAST 13th STREET, NEW YORK.
506
RICHARD E. THIBAUT, WALL PAPERS.
No 52 EAST I3TH STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN UNIVERSITY PLACE AND BROADWAV.
CRAWFORD SHOE STORE.
BROADWAY, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF 12TH STREET.
Crawford Shoe Stores in New York:
Broadway and Fourteenth St.
Broadway and Twelfth St.
Broadway, No. 1 77 (near Cortlandt St.)
West 125th St., No. 216 (Harlem).
The Crawford Shoe for Men only.
Custom Made, . . $6.00
Hand Made, .... 5.00
Hand Sewed, .... 4.00
French Welt, .... 3.00
The Crawford Shoe is sold only to the wearer.
It is never sold to dealers.
It can be obtained only at our own
Crawford Shoe Stores,
in the principal AMERICAN CITIES.
508
LONGLEY BROTHERS
Importers of WOOLENS AND WORSTED COATINGS
Union Square, Broadway & 14th St.
New York
FOURTEENTH STREET AND BROADWAY.
SOUTH SIDE OF UNION SQUARE, LOOKING TOWARD GRACE CHURCH.
EAST FOURTEENTH STREET.
FROM UNIVERSITY PLACE TO FIFTH AVENUE.
^^fy^
1 m'kTj3»J
.D FULTON STREET.
The Past and The Present
are both treated in generous proportions in " King's Handbook of New
York City;" although the book's greatest value is its exceedingly thorough
description of the present city of New York.
Many matters just passing out of ihe recollection of the present gen-
eration, such as the "Loew Bridge," as shown above, which had been
erected at the crossing of Fulton Street and Broadway, to facilitate the
traffic at that point, are told about in this book.
Get the book and look it over once and you will gladly buy it to take
it to your home, for the benefit of your family and yourself.
1008 Pages. 1029 Illustrations. 72 Columns of Index.
The whole cost is $2.00.
MOSES KING, Publisher,
BOSTON, MASS.
THE BLIZZARD OF MARCH 11th, 12th AND 13th, 18
PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN JUST AFTER THE STORM, BY LANGILL.
HON SQUARE.
FOURTH AVENUE. WASHINGTON MONUMENT UNION SQUARE HOTEL.
FOURTH AVENUE, LOOKING NORTH FROM UNION SQUARE.
UNION SQUARE HOTEL,
NEW YORK.
When visiting New York, you will find the Union Square
Hotel a very desirable location, fronting on Union Square Park,
corner 15th street, near Broad wa\-, in the very center of the fashion-
able shopping district, and convenient to all theatres and principal
attractions of the city. This well known Hotel is patronized by the
best people from all parts of the world, and having recently been
newly furnished and decorated throughout, and equipped with all
modern conveniences, makes it one of the most comfortable and
home-like Hotels in the Metropolis.
The Union Square Hotel is run on the European plan and
charges are moderate. For rates and full particulars, address,
J. H. FIFE, Manager.
THE WESTiMINSTER HOTEL,
At Irving Place and Sixteenth Street— In One of the Quietest
and Most Aristocratic Localities of New York.
^^HE WESTMINSTER HOTEL, a picture of which is present-
J^ ed on the opposite page, is situated at the corner of Irving
Place and Sixteenth Street, one of the quietest and most
aristocratic localities of New York. While this is the very centre of
the Metropolis, being within a block of Union Square, where all the
great retail stores, the fashionable promenades, the theatres and all
the direct lines of transit by elevated and surface roads find a
nucleus, the immediate surroundings of Irving Place are as peaceful
as a suburban resort. The advantages of such a location are obvi-
ous. To escape the bustle, din and confusion that characterize the
great thoroughfares of New York and yet be in the midst of the
shopping and amusement centres, constitute an attraction which no
visitor can afford to ignore.
The Westminster, by reason of its quiet elegance, superior
cuisine and liberal management, has always enjoyed a high rep-
utation among the old established first-class New York hotels. Its
many points of superiority are often quoted by the press of the coun-
try. The house has always been distinguished for its exclusiveness and
homelike atmosphere. A notable feature are its arrangements for the
accommodation of families with children and attendants in the West-
minster apartment house which adjoins and connects with the hotel.
Although one of the oldest hostelries in New York, The West-
minster, under the progressive spirit and liberal management of Mr.
E. N. Anable, the proprietor, has always kept apace with the trend of
modern innovation, improvements and luxuries. One of its latest
attractions is an exquisitely furnished coffee and smoking room fitted
up in Oriental style and illuminated at night by tiny electric lights
covered by red shades, where guests of both sexes may retire, and
while the women sip their after-dinner coffee the men may indulge
in post-prandial cigars or cigarettes.
The Westminster is one of the few remaining first-class hotels con-
ducted on the American plan, with rates that are exceptionally reason-
able in proportion to the many attractions and the excellence of the table.
The advantages of living on the American plan while in a
strange city are many, chief among them being the ability to bring
one's living expenses down to a lower figure than the European plan
will permit, and to know in advance the daily living expenses.
516
517
UNION SQUARE, LOOKING TOWARD THE NORTHWEST.
THE EVERETT HOUSE FRONTS ON UNION SQUARE.
KUFFFl! HOUSF,
UNION SQUARE,
17th street and FOURTH AVENUE,
NEW YORK.
An Established House under new management.
Thoroughly renovated, perfect sanitation and all modern
improvements.
An Hotel of excellent cuisine, superior service and quiet,
homelike comfort.
THE RENDEZVOUS OF DISTINGUISHED EUROPEANS.
European Plan. B. L. M. BATES, Proprietor.
518
1 ll.-Tb^iir
BANK OF THE METROPOLIS.
UNION SQUARE WEST, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF 16TH STREET.
THEOD. ROGERS,
PHEST.
WM. B. ISHAM,
VICE-PRES' T.
E. C. EVANS,
CASHtEF
Bank of i\}c 21IctropoIt5,
29 UNION SQUARE,
Cor. East Sixteenth St. NEW YORK.
$300,000
750,000
CHARLES L. TIFFANY,
SAMUEL SLOAN,
ROBERT SCHELL
Directors:
JOSEPH PARK,
WM. STEINWAY,
THEOD. ROGERS,
WM. B. ISHAM,
W. D. SLOANE,
HICKS ARNOLD.
521
BRENTANO'S;— PERIODICALS, BOOKS, PHOTOGRAPHS AND STATIONERY.
UNION SQUARE WEST, NORTHWEST CORNER OF IBTH STREET.
WILLIAM EVARTS BENJAMIN, PUBLISHER AND BOOKSELLER; THE LITERARy GALLERY.
NO 22 EAST 'eTH STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN BROADWAY AND FIFTH AVENUE, NEAR UNION SQUARE.
MARGARET LOUISA HOME;— MRS. ELLIOTT F. SHEPARD'S GIFT TO THE Y. W. 0. A.
Nos. 14 AND 16 EAST 16TH STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN BROADWAY AND FIFTH AVENUE.
RARITAN
HOLLOW
i™ POROUS
BRICK CO.
Offices: 874 BROHDWIIY, NEW YORK.
McINTYRE BUILDING,
PHOTO ON OPPOSITE PAGE.
FACTORIES :
Keasbey, N. J.
FIRE PROOF BUILDING
MATERIALS
FANCY FRONT BRICK
FIRE BRICK
ENGLISH ENAMELLED
BRICK
We have furnished the Fire Proofing used in the following Buildings, photographs of
which appear in this book upon pages mentioned:
PAGE BUILDING
339 World Building,
75 Union Trust Go's Building,
123 Bank of America,
70 Standard Oil Go's Building,
95 New York Stock Exchange,
71 Con. Stock & Petroleum Exchange,
U. S. Army Building,
III Mechanics' National Bank,
Manhattan Savings Bank,
Lincoln Building,
527 Mclntyre Building,
261 Western Union Building,
Greenwich Savings Bank,
241 Metropolitan Telephone Building,
491 Clinton Hall Association Building,
121 Thomson Building,
221 Brooklyn Life Insurance Co.,
229 Williamsburg City Fire Ins. Co.,
65 Washington Building,
Mount Morris Bank,
Schermerhorn Building, Broadway
and 4th Street,
Warren Building, Broadway & 20th
Street,
Mohawk Building,
187 American Bank Note Co. Building,
321 Vanderbilt Building,
409 Mutual Reserve Fund Building,
595 Waldorf Hotel,
645 Hotel Netherland,
Hotel Renaissance,
PAGE BUILDING
661 Central Park Apartment Houses
— Dakota, Madrid, Lisbon,
The Chelsea Apartment House,
The Dalhousie Apartment House,
The Osborne Apartment House,
668 Am. Museum of Natural History
Brearley School,
New York Hospital,
Church & Friary of St. Anthony,
Ehrich Bros. Building,
Freundschaft Club,
Residence of Wm. Pickhardt, Esq.
College of St. Francis Xavier,
New York Cancer Hospital,
615 Grand Central Depot Addition,
619 Pottier & Stynius Building,
571 New York Society for Prevention
of Cruelty to Children.
215 Mutual Life Ins. Go's Building.
American Theatre,
Stevens Building,
Diamond Exchange Building,
Sheldon Building,
369 Home Life Ins. Go's Building,
Charles T. Yerkes's Residence,
45 Corn Exchange National Bank,
73 Manhattan Life Inc.. Co"s Building,
541 Scribner Building,
Grace Church Mission Building,
609 St. Cloud Hotel (new addition),
Presbyterian Building.
526
If ■
'•^■■^.
f^
i'_mz^ ^
'"^. ^r «-*«- *^ ^ ««^ ^^
^il
'^1
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'ffi
>■ '«! ill »
THE MclNTYRE BUILDING.
BROADWAY, NORTHEAST CORNER OF 18th STREET.
CHARLES LEIDUTZ
Electrical
Engineer and Contractor,
telephone: 10 WEST 23d ST., NEW YORK .
995 EIGHTEENTH ST. '" —
INSTALLED
THE ELECTRICAL WORK
L\ THE
COr^SXABLE BUILDIIVG
(see opposite page),
AND ALSO IN THE FOLLOWING BUILDINGS:
St. Luke's Hospital, on Morningside Heights.
Bank for Savings, Fourth Avenue and 22d Street.
Roosevelt Building, Broadway and i^jth Street.
Western Union Telegraph Building, Broadway and Dey Street.
Mutual Reserve Building, Broadway and Duane Street.
Hotel Majestic, Boulevard and 726 Street.
Le.xington Avenue Opera House, 58th Street, near Third Avenue.
Presbyterian Building, Fifth Avenue and 20th Street.
National Shoe and Leather Bank, Broadway and Chambers Street.
Museum of Natural History, Manhattan Square,
Criminal Courts Building, Centre Street.
New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, Second Avenue and 13th Street.
Market and Fulton Bank Building, Fulton Street.
Manhattan Storage and Warehouse Co., Broadway and 53d Street,
Etc.
rrn E I
'I "r 'r^ .Tt 1^ '' ''
il Ks tc; f\ 1 1
•« B h -v
If;:. hM ^
-^ - '^' IJ] l?T
1^1 !fi ';
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THE CONSTABLE BUILDING.
FIFTH AVENUE, NORTHEAST CORNER OF 18th STREET, ADJOINING ARNOLD, CONSTABLE 4 CO.
529
HEAL ESTATE AGEN
• ">.
THE GORHAM MANUFACTURING COMPANY, SILVERSMITHS.
BROADWAY, NORTHWEST CORNER OF 19rH STREET.
S3»
Established 1823.
^du/ard f\. |T\orriso9 9 5^^^
IMPORTERS,
HIGH CLASS BLACK DRESS GOODS,
FINE DRESS TRIMMINGS,
KID GLOVES, RIBBONS, LACES AND EMBROIDERIES,
MILLINERY,
INFANTS' AND CHILDREN'S WEAR,
Small Wares and Fancy Goods,
FINE GOWNS AND WRAPS,
Ladies' UnderNvear,
No. 893 BROADWAY,
Between 19th and 20th Sts., NEW YORK.
CARRIAGE ENTRANCE 13 EAST 19TH ST.
EDWARD A. MORRISON & SON, LACES, TRIMMINGS, MILl INERY AND DRESS GOODS.
No. 893 BROADWAY, WEST SIDE, BETWEEN 19TH AND 20th STREETS.
THE
Churches
OF
New York.
The chapter on the churches
of New York in "King's Hand-
book" contains more than one
hundred pictures of the repre-
sentative churches of every
denomination. And besides
giving a condensed history of
all the various denominations,
it gives a brief history and
description of about one hun-
dred and fifty different churches.
This chapter alone is said to be
worth the whole price of " King's Handbook," and yet it is only
one out of thirty such chapters, each comprising an entirely dif-
ferent topic. And the one hundred churches are only a part of
the 1029 photographic illustrations which are embodied in the 1008
handsomely printed pages. Send two dollars for "King's Handbook
of New York City," and if you are not satisfied with it you can get
your money refunded.
MOSES KING, Piiblishfr, Boston, Mass.
COLLEGIATE CHURCH,
FIFTH AVENUE AND FORTY-EIGHTH STREET.
534
^
1
mm ^ V
\ 'M
<
.'\
T^
:-^
«?
%-
The Fowler & Wells Co.
SCIENTISTS AND PUBLISHERS.
[Reprinted from " King's Handbook of New York City."]
The Fowler & Wells Company is a scientific institution that has a
world-wide reputation. For nearly sixty years its founders and owners have
maintained an othce in the city of New York, and have been the recognized
leaders in the phrenological, physiological and hygenic sciences, and for half
a century they have been the main educators in these branches of useful study.
They are classed in a business way as phrenologists and publishers, but they
might well be called a scientific and educational institution. They occupy the
building at 27 East 21st Street, near Broadwa3^ where is carried on the work
inaugurated by Orson S. Fowler and Lorenzo N. Fowler in 1835. These men
were the first in America to give the science of phrenology a practical value
by making special delineations of character. They began work in a small
wa)^ but steadily increased its scope. In 1843 they were joined by Samuel R.
Wells, who subsequently married Charlotte Fowler, the sister of his partners.
In course of time both the Fowlers withdrew from the house. Orson, who
was one of the most famous phrenologists of the world, died in 1887.
Lorenzo still practices his profession in London. Mr. Wells conducted the
business of the original house until his death, in 1875, and his widow, Charlotte
F. Wells, assumed the management until 1884. Then the Fowler & Wells
Company was incorporated which now has as officers Charlotte Fowler Wells,
President ; Nelson Sizer, Vice-President and phrenological examiner; Dr. H.
S. Drayton, Secretary; Dr. Edgar C. Beall, general editor of the company's
publications ; and W. L. Baner, Treasurer and business manager. The Com-
pany publishes The Phrenological Journal, of which the ninet3'-eighth
volume has just been completed, a number of serial publications, and a
large list of standard works on phrenology, physiognomy, ethnology, physi-
ology, psychology and hygiene.
It has handsome business offices and spacious editorial rooms, lecture-
rooms and phrenological parlors, where examinations are made, and charts
given daily, indicating choice of pursuit, means of culture, etc. An outgrowth
of the business of the concern is the American Institute of Phrenology, which
was incorporated as an educational institution in 1866. Among the original
incorporators were Horace Greeley, Rev. Dr. Samuel Osgood, Judge Amos
Dean, Henry Dexter, Samuel R. Wells, Lester A. Roberts, Edward P. Fowler,
M. D., and Nelson Sizer. Each year, beginning on the first Tuesday in
September, a course of instruction in practical phrenology is given b}' a corps
of experts under the direction of Prof. Sizer, the President of the Institute.
An interesting feature in the lecture-room of the Fowler & Wells Company's
building is a large collection of casts of the heads of people who have been
prominent in various ways in past years ; also, skulls from many nations and
tribes, as well as animal crania, illustrative of phrenology, and constituting
a free public museum, and material for instruction in the Institute.
53^
FOWLER & WELLS CO., PUBLISHERS AND PHRENOLOGISTS.
No. 27 EAST 21ST STREET, JUST EAST OF BROADWAY.
THE
Exhaustive Concordance
TO THE BIBLB
Tracing every word of the text of the common English version
of the canonical books, and every occurrence of each word in
regular order, together with a
Comparative Concordance
to the authorized and revised versions, including the American
variations; also. brief DICTIONARIES OF THE HEBREW
AND GREEK WORDS of the original, with references to
the English words.
By James strong, s.t.d., ll.d.
Complete in One Volume, Quarto. In Fine Cloth, Red Edges, $6 00 ; in Half
Russia, Cloth Sides, $8.00 ; in Halt Turkey Morocco, extra strong, $10.00
Delivered free in any part of the United States on receipt of price.
Specimen pages will be sent on application to the publishers.
1826— 1S94
XCbe Cbtistian
Hbvocate
GRE.\T WEEKLY
" Official Newspaper of the Church "'
An advertisement in this paper is a swift
messengfer to a wide-awake people. Adver-
tisements received subject to approval.
Sample copiss sent on application.
Sunba^ School
Journal ::::::
KOR TEACHERS
The best monthly teachers' helper in the
preparation of the Bible lessons for each
Sabbath of the year.
nr)etbobi8t 1Boo\\ Concern
HUNT & EATON, Agents
150 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK
538
"THEl christian advocate," METHODIST BOOK CONCERN AND MISSION HOUSE.
FIFTH AVENUE, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF 20th STREET.
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, PUBLISHERS OF BOOKS AND SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE."
OWNING AND OCCUPYING ENTIRE BUILDING, N03 153, 155 AND 157 FIFTH AVENUE, EAST SIDE, BET. 21ST AND 22D STS.
WALL STREET.
NORTH SIDE, FROM THE SUB-TREASURY TO TRINITY CHURCH.
"KING'S HANDBOOK OF •
* NEW YORK CITY *
• AN • OUTLINE • HISTORY •
• AND • DESCRIPTION • OF •
• THE • AMERICAN • METROPOLIS •
"This most excellent, exhaustive, and descriptive history of the city should
occupy a place in the library of every citizen. It affords additional pleasure
to those who love the grand city, by calling iheir attention to the vast number
of reasons wh}' all her citizens should have an aflfection for and pride in New
York. The title furnishes no adequate idea of the work
In addition to gathering all the information and facts concerning the city,
photographs were taken from every point of vantage of the different sections,
streets, parks, buildings and scenes of the city, from which were made 1029
exceptionally fine photographic illustrations. The paper, printing and press
work are the best that money could procure in America." The volume is
handsomely bound in the finest muslin, finely gilded, artistically stamped,
1008 pages, 1029 illustrations, size ^^4 x j'/i inches, and is sold for the
merely nominal price of $2.00. Expressage 30 cents extra to any part of the
world. No New Yorker should be without a copy
MOSES KING, PUBLISHER, BOSTON, MASS.
SI3
^
-^«MWHi4;
S44
v^
^ss l^^^l
1 ■— i
/' /^
5
\ir.r^^icii^
M.
"CENTRALIZATION WITH ECONOMY.'*
Terminal
WAREHOUSE Company,
No. 9 PRODUCE EXCHAMGE,
General Offices. ^EW YORK CITY.
CENTRAL STORES, ROSSITER STORES,
Foot 37tli and 38tli Streets, Foot 59th ami 60th Streets,
NOllTH KIVER. NORTH lilVER.
WEST SHORE STORES,
WEEHAWKKN, NKW JERSEY.
These Warehouses are the Terminals of the New York Central & Hudson River R.R., the
New York, New Haven & Hartford R.R., the New York & New England R.R.
and the West Shore R.R , so that goods from any part of the country
can easily be unloaded within the walls of these warehouses.
We offer all the facilities desired for
GENERAL MERCHANDISE STORAGE (Free or Bond),
FREEZING AND COLD STORAGE,
AND FURNITURE STORAGE,
And for LIGHTERAGE IN and AROUND NEW YORK.
niDMITTIDl? CTHPATl? '^ given particular attention at the new Central
fUlliulUIllj IjlUrinUJj Stores where large or small lots of hou.sehold fur-
niture, pictures, pianos, mirrors, bronzes, statuary, trunks, carriages and other goods are
received and cared for at moderate chr.rges. Theatrical Scenery and Effects
are placed as desired in general or private rooms of any size.
FURS, CARPETS AND WOOLENS are provided for in specially constructed
freezing rooms, if desired.
STORES ENTIRELY NEW AND CLEAN.
Estimates including lightering, or packing, or moving, cliecrfull}- furnislied.
Terminal Warehouse Company,
WILLIAM W. ROSSITER, President.
JOHN H. LYNCH, 2o VicE-PRES. AND Secy.
'Cnistccs :
H. Walter Webr, William R. Grace, John E. Searles,
Vice Pres. N.Y. C.&H. R. R.R. W. R. Grace & Co. Treas.Am. Sugar Refining Co.
B. AvMAR Sands, James Stili man, Chas. W. Hogan,
Piatt & Bowers. Woodward & Stillman. T. Hogan & Sons.
George A. Morrison, William W. Rossitrr, Edward Ann.an,
Vice-Pres. Washington Trust Co. Late of Rosbiter & Skidniore.
546
547
$10.00
G* [ FOR AN IDEA!
Silver or
Currency
N
OT a complex one, or a simple one, nor yet an
idiotic brain wave; but a bright, catchy, persuasive
suggestion, available for advertising the best Life
Insurance Company on earth. It may be an illustra-
tion, a phrase, a sentence or two, a stick-full. The
advertiser is the judge. He means to be fair, and
yet he has his crotchets. He will award the prize to
one, and will not use others unless he bargains for
the privilege with the author. .'. .". .*. .'. .".
ADDRESS,
The Penn Mutual Life
Insurance Company
921,923 & 925 CHESTNUT ST.
PHILADELPHIA
S48
•4"*a^'
w Hparelle.
[PHOTOGRAVURES IN COLORS.!
PHOTOGRAVURERS are of all classes of
subjects. An important modification of this
process has recently been perfected (patent
applied for), by which the delicacy of the
Gelatine print'is maintained, at the same
time that great strength and color is pro-
duced in the shadows. The plates thus
made are very durable, and show but little
wear after many thousands of impressions
have been produced. Moreover, they re-
quire no finishing or handling after having
been etched, and are quite easily printed.
AQUARELLES are printed from Photo-
gravure plaies, inked up locally in a variety
of colors. When the whole of the plate has
been so inked, the impression is pulled.
The results are beautiful, but the process of
printing is exceedingly slow, three or four
impressions a day, only, being obtainable
from a moderate sized plate.
New York Photogravure Co.
137 West 23d Street,
NEW YORK.
aijd
CHROME-GELATINE is a perfected modifi-
cation of the three-color printing process.
It is so named from the Gelatine process of
printing being used to produce the resulting
pictures, which are allowed to be really won-
derful, which may be reproductions from
original oil paintings, water colors, views
from nature, objects from still life, textile
fabrics, indeed all classes of work copied
from originals in color. The results, in all
cases, are produced froin three-color nega-
tives. Artists whose works have been
reproduced by this method, express their
satisfaction of the results in the highest
terms, without qualification.
New York Photogravure Co.
137 West 23d Street,
NEW YORK.
PuHiiGatiODS.
THE NEW YORK PHOTOGRAVURE CO. has
on hand thousands of subjects of all classes,
available for the purposes of illustration,
and at the service of its customers. The
newest and best subjects are being con-
tinually added to this collection. Sets of
illu.strations selected with the greatest care
and .skill for any desired purpose.
New York Photogravure Co.
137 West 23d Street,
NEW YORK.
Sun anfi Slade.
AN ARTISTIC PERIODICAL. Published
monthly. 40 cents a number, $4.00 a year.
Each number contains eight exquisite
Photogravures, Photo-Gelatines or Color
Prints by the new Chrome-Gelatine process,
printed on paper 11x14 inches, with de-
scriptive letterpress. Six volumes are now
complete, price, $4 00 each. Each volume
contains 100 plates. The whole six volumes
form a complete gallery of current art.
•'SITN AKD SHADE reproduces
not only the most notable paintings and
portraits, but the best work of amateur and
professional photographers. If it gave
nothing but the latter work it would be de-
serving of the most liberal patronage that
it receives ; but it is an admirable record of
the greatest paintings at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, of living American players,
of portraits of celebrated Americans, of
great American painters, with reproduc-
tions of their work, and it is a monument
of the New York Photogravure Co., which
is a monument of artistic New York."
New York Photogravure Co.
137 West 23d Street,
NEW YORK.
THE NEW YORK PHOTOGRAVURE COMPANY.
No. 137 WEST 23d STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN SIXTH AND SEVENTH AVENUES.
BEST & CO
To Have
Children Clothed
Correctly and Tastefully
Need add nothing to the cost. This is our specialty and has been
for years. Our entire store is filled with the best things for Infants,
Boys, Girls, Misses and Youths — including everything from Hats
to Shoes.
All the workers in our establishment give their whole attention,
skill and experience to this particular business. Is it not plain that
this gives us advantages in price, variety and convenience in shopping,
impossible elsewhere?
By IVIail
WE BEG leave to remind customers out of town that we have
a IVIail Order Department organized to attend to all requests
by mail for samples or information about goods. This department
is for those who wish to save time, patience and money. You can
buy more advantageously through the mail from us than you can at
home, if you follow out instructions sent with samples or illustra-
tions. Strangers to us are advised that more than ordinary attention
is paid to all mail orders. More than that : for any good reason, if
purchases are not satisfactory, goods can be returned, expressage
prepaid, and money will be cheerfully refunded. Send for Catalogue.
BEST & CO.
60 and 62 West 23d Street
NEW YORK
BEST & CO., LILIPUTIAN BAZAAR ;— COMPLETE OUTFITTERS FOR CHILDREN.
Nos. 60 AND 62 WEST 23d STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN FIFTH AND SIXTH AVENUES.
SIMPSON'S *
Bo9-Boi}S, Q^oGoiates,
Fancy Baskets and Bonbonnieres,
CANDIES OF ALL KINDS,
PURE AND DELICIOUS FLAVORS, FRESH
FROM OUR OWN FACTORY EVERY DAY.
ALL GOODS CAREFULLY PACKED AND SHIPPED TO ANY PART OF
THE WORLD BY MAIL OR EXPRESS.
54 WEST 23d STREET, bet. Fifth and Sixth Aves.
ess
SIMPSON'S
)lgnnel7 dp'aplopi^
Our Ladies' and Gentlemen's Lunch
Parlors are the Finest in the City.
PROMPT AMD QUICK SERVICE.
SIMPSON'S
No. 54 WEST TWENTY-THIRD STREET.
SIMPSON'S RESTAURANT AND CONFECTIONERY ESTABLISHMENT.
NO. 54 WEST 23D STREET, SOUTH SIDE, BETWEEN FIFTH AND SIXTH AVENUES.
555
FLINT'S
Fine Furniture
Four Facts that Fit in tlie New Store
f
IRST FACT
S
No beauty of design or ornamentation in the furniture of any country
or any century but that finds its artistic reproduction in our furniture,
ECOND FACT
Z
No material, either wood or metal, that the markets of the whole world
can supply, but that is found in our furniture in utmost perfection.
HIRD FACT
f
No skill of cabinet making to be found on either hemisphere sur-
passes that of our artisans.
OURTH FACT
No furniture house in the world displays in its warerooms or makes
to order furniture that excels that whicli fitly finds expression in the
phrase, " Flint's Fine Furniture."
And the prices are what you might hope for when you "BUY OF THE MAKER.
George C. Flint Co.
NEAR BROADWAY
43, 45 ana 47 West 23d St., New York
Factories: 154 ^ 156 West 19th Street
556
GEORGE C. FLINT COMPANY, FURNITURE, UPHOLSTERY AND DECORATIONS.
NOS. 43, 45 AND 47 WEST 23d STflEET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN FIFTH AND SIXTH AVENUES.
5S7
Costumers.
^our 5ra6e JTlark guarantee5*,i|^'
Correct ^t^Ie 5) Perfect Jit v^^^
39 S 41 \u. 23r^^t.
558
0k' mm n^'^ mmm
II II II II II II
11 II II II II II
11 11 n 11 11 II
^T^ DEUTSCHE CO. ^^ 1
II II nil II 11
DEUTSCH & CO., LADIES' GARMENTS, SUITS AND CLOAKS.
NOS. 39 AND 41 WEST 23D STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN BROADWAY AND SIXTH AVENUE.
559
The Fifth Avenue Hotel,
The Largest, B«'St Appointed aiul 31«>.st liberally Managed Hotel in New
York, with the Most Central an
'm^"
-.^«
S6i
r
L. Haberstroh & Son
Interior Decorators
AND
Painters,
No. 9 Park Street, BOSTON, MASS.
Tapestries^ Embossed Leather, Mosaic
and Textile Fabric effects
reproduced on
CEILINGS AND WALLS.
Also Papier Mache\ Carton Pierre, Plastic
Relief and all kinds of Hand-
Wrono-ht Decorations,
o
Sketches and estimates furnished and work exe-
cuted in any part of the United States.
X
TnURftLpECORg^TORI
9 PARK ST- COR- tSEACOIi
• BOSTOli MASS • «-5^
562
METROPOLITAN POLICE ANNUAL PARADE.
REVIEWED BY INFANTA EULALIA IN MADISON SQUARE IN 1893.
PHOTOGRAPHS
OF
NEW YORK
•w OW^ Xliree Tlioiisaiid (3000) iiejjatives of New York
Viovs— buildings, scenes, etc.— covering: every subject
of any special interest in the whole city. If you need a
Fhotograph — mounted or unmounted— of any :sjew York sub-
ject, >vrite to me for it.
MOSE8 KING, Publisher,
BOSTON, MASS.
564
-^i=^i=si
nm^
^nmrn^^i^^
^\m^
m-Mi
mm^i
•A,ai«
^La.
565
T§p Hoffman Housf,
MADISON SQUARE,
NEW YORK.
Qpenincj, ^irst Pay of January, ^895.
THIS well-known Hostelry was reopened the first day of
Januar}', 1895. During the preceding six months the es-
tablishment was rebuilt and modernized, so that in all its nu-
merous appointments it compares favorably with any hotel__in
the world.
THE Hoffman House fronts on Broadway and Madison
Square, enjoying the most delightful and important location
in this city, in the midst of the great shopping and amusement
district. Its location is unsurpassed, and the management feel
that they can extend to ladies and families many conveniences
and comforts not found elsewhere.
THE New Addition to the Hofi'man is ten stories in height
and of steel and marble, and in all respects in keeping with
the rest of the property. In re-building it was designed that
guests should have perfect security from fire, and with that in
view, the laundry, boilers, steam engines and dynamos were re-
moved from the Hotel to premises on Twenty-fourth Street pur-
chased expressly for that purpose.
THE Refrigerating Plant is of the most approved order, and
capable of making twenty tons of pure ice daily. The entire
plumbing system was newly constructed according to the latest
sanitary requirements.
ELECTRIC LIGHTS are used exclusively, and generated by
a plant of capacity of six thousand lights. Telephones for
convenience of guests connect the main Hotel office with every
hallway throughout the Hotel. Turkish and Russian baths on
the premises.
HOFFMAN HOUSE COMPANY.
566
S67
BROKER. AGENT.
Geo. R. Read
Real Estate
MAIN OFFICE: No. 9 PINE STREET,
(Astor Building).
UP-TOWN OFFICE: No. i MADISON AVENUE,
(Metropolitan Life Building).
NEW YORK CITY.
AUCTIONEER. APPRAISER.
AGENT FOR THE FOLLOWING OFFICE BUILDINGS :
Corn Exchange Bank Building,
Home Life Insurance Company's Building,
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company's Building,
American Tract Society Building,
New York Coffee Exchange Building,
Lancashire Insurance Company's Building,
Astor Building,
Constable Building,
J. Monroe Taylor Building,
Downey Building,
56 and 58 Pine Street Building,
Edison Building,
Sheldon Building, etc.
GEO. R. READ, Agent.
568
V' 'p-
1 1 » ' . e !=
it J
3
;[' [^ , Life fc" - ' .r ^^
.«."-^*i-'--
r
'^:^^'- •>.*ii
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY.
METROPOLITAN LIFE BUILDING : MADISON SQUARE, 23o STREET AND MADISON AVENUE.
J. p. HALL.
(Late of Ticker & Hall,)
Electrical Contractor,
OFFICE ROOM, 235 CENTRAL lUIILDING,
143 Liberty Street, - NEW YORK.
Among the buildings illustrated in this book, we have installed complete
Electric Lighting Plants in the following :
1. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.
2. Pulitzer (" The World") Building.
3. Central R.R. of New Jersey Building.
4. Union Trust Company.
5. Central Trust Company.
6. Stokes Building.
. 7. United Charities Building.
8. Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Co.
9. National Park Bank.
10. Oilman Collamore & Co.
11. Morgan S. S. Line (2 piers.)
12. Holland House.
13. The Windsor Hotel.
T4. Hotel Imperial.
ESTIMATES ON COMPLETE ELECTRIC LIGHT INSTALLATIONS, FOR BOTH
ALTERNATING AND DIRECT CURRENT FURNISHED.
J. P. HAIvL,
Electrical and Mechanical Engineer and Contractor,
NEW YORK CITY.
■Ul l^
PACKARD'S BUSINESS COLLEGE.
FOURTH AVENUE, NORTHEAST CORNER 23d STREET.
«?•■
4
^ N
^ <«
V,'
v"'
.r^ 1^
• IJ
Il
b It
i
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^4f
UNITED CHARITIES BUILDING.
FOURTH AVENUE, NORTHEAST CORNER OF 220 STREET,
572
till »|.
!1 -^^
-i
LYCEUM THEATRE.
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF DESIGN.
FOURTH AVENUE, NORTHWEST CORNER OF 23D STREET
I
— H
.11
:,J
-■ '..If: -i l! •• r
^i .::|4_|jji
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FOURTH AVENUE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
23D STREET.
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION.
FOURTH AVENUE, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF 23d STREET.
573
This is a safe and profitable investment for You.
Cass Realty Corporation,
(incorporated under the laws of the state of new YORK.)
Capital invested in productive Real Estate in
New York City.
THE VERY BEST PLACE TO
PUT YOUR MONEY.
Common Stock pays six per cent, a year.
Preferred Stock five per cent, a year.
Dividends paid quarterly.
Shares ® ^^e fjlinbri^b JloUave each
Payments may be made in small amounts when
desired, for which Certificates will be issued.
Call or address,
Charles 14^. Cass,
PRESIDENT,
No. 503 Fifth Avenue,
N. E. Cor. 42d Street,
New York City.
,TR>
'j*"*"""'i» f
•WE- BLOOOGOOO • ARC HITCC T-
•64 CEDAR ST- NY
CASS REALTY CORPORATION'S BLOCK ON TWENTY-THIRD STREET.
TWENTY-THIRt) STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN SECOND AND THIRD AVENUES.
Largest Dealers in Horses in theWorld.
HORSE AUCTION MARTS.
ALBANY.
NEW YORK.
BRANCH stables:
BUFFALO.
LANCASTER, Pa.,
JERSEY CITY, N. J.
THE NEW YORK MART is on both sides of EAST 24th STREET,
between Lexington and Third Avenues.
Regular Auction Sales every MONDAY and THURSDAY— Rain or
Shine— at the BLUE FRONT MART .
The Buffalo Mart consists of a well-arranged group of stables, conveniently situated
near the railroad tracks and East Buffalo Stock Yards.
The Albany Mart, comprises the former Albany Stock Yards, with its seventy acres of land ,
twenty-seven acres of which are covered by stables. In connection there is also a hotel
within the yards. All sheep, hogs and cattle coming east of Buffalo pass through these yards.
Extensive Variety— Square Dealing Commodious Facilities.
Intending purchasers are respectfully invited to inspect our stock before buying ; you can
save 20 per cent.; have as much trial as can be obtained anywhere. For reliability and
fair dealing, second to none.
FISS St. DOERR,
24th STREET, bet. Lexington and 3d Aves., NEW YORK.
MART AT BUFFALO, N. Y. •'. .*. M ART AT ALB AN Y, N . Y.
FISS & DOERR'S
HORSE AUCTION MARTS, BUFFALO, N. Y,
576
FIbb & DOERR'S HORSE AUCTION AND SALES MARTS.
NOS. 156, 158, 160, 162 AND 164 EAST 24th STREET, BETWEEN LEXINGTON AND THIRD AVENUES.
^ ^
ir~-
<
^ .ll ..^'^
m^-
11
FISS & DOERR'S HORSE AUCTION AND bALEb MAN lb.
NOS. 147, 149, 151, 153, 155 AND 157 EAST 24th STREET, BETWEEN LEXINGTON AND THIRD AVENUES.
^7 5/7
WM. H. NESBIT
PAUL PFOTENHAUER
B
I
C
K
S
PFOTENHAUER & NESBIT
Metropolitan Building, Madison Ave. & 23d St.
NEW YORK
SOLE AGENTS FOR THE
.I flRDEN BRICK GO .
OF PHILADELPHIA
CAPACITY:
Qnp Hunbrpb Ifiillions Epf Hnnum
MANUFACTURERS OF HIGH GRADE
FRONT AND ORNAMENTAL BRICKS
IN THE VARIOUS SHADES OF
Buff, Red, Grey, Pompeian, Old Gold, Brown, White, etc.
TELEPHONE, 667 18TH ST.
Exhibits at New York and Philadelphia Salesrooms, and at
Building Material Exhibit, Nos. 276-282 Washington St., B'klyn.
One million of these bricks are being used in the Power House —
see opposite page.
» I '=*' f a i! I fi
X
TIFFANY FAVRILF GLASS
TIFFAN Y- CLASS \:^- DECORATING COMPANY'
FVRN1SHERSA5 CLASS WORKERS ^DOMESTIC A5 ECCLESIASTICAL-
DECORATIONS- \^il\J ■ MEMORIALS-
333TO 341 FOVIiTH AVENVE - NEW-YORK-
TIFFANY FAVRILE GLASS IS THE OUTCOME OF A SERIES OF
EXPERIMENTS RECENTLY CONDUCTED BY MR. LOUIS C. TIFFANY.
THE RESULT OF THESE INVESTIGATIONS IS SHOWN IN NEW
COMBINATIONS OF COLOR WITH COLOR, COLOR OVER COLOR,
THE DEEPENING OF TONE, THE SUBTLE QUALITY OF THE
TEXTURE, THE INTRODUCTION OF NEW COLORS, THE UNION
OF METAL WITH GLASS, AND THE WONDERFUL ORNAMENTAL
EFFECTS OBTAINED BY IMBEDDING LINES AND THREADS OF ONE
COLORED GLASS IN THAT OF ANOTHER, WHILE THEY ARE IN
A MOLTEN STATE, AND DURING THE OPERATION OF BLOWING.
TIFFANY FAVRILE GLASS HAS BEEN MADE INTO A VARIETY OF
ORIGINAL FORMS IN VASES AND OTHER OBJECTS OF INTEREST
TO COLLECTORS AND LOVERS OF ART. IT IS ALSO USED IN
OUR FINER COLORED WINDOWS AND MOSAICS.
TIFFANY FAVRILE GLASS.
MADISON SQUARE GARDEN TOWER VIEW.
LOOKING TOWARD THE EAST. E^ST RIVER IN THE DISTANCE.
MADISON SQUARE GARDEN TOWER VIEW.
LOOKING TOWARD THE WEST. NORTH RIVER IN THE DISTANCE.
582
IfllltlHffif
MADISON SQUARE GARDEN.
MADISON SQUARE. MADISON AND FOURTH AVENUES, AND EAST 26th AND EAST 27rH STREETS.
R. Wallace & Sons
Manufactiinng Co,
No. 226 Fifth Avenue,
Between 26tJi and 2jf/i Sf reefs,
NEW YORK
CHICAGO SALESROOM: SAN FRANCISCO SALESROOM;
86 Wabash Ave. 1 20 Sutter St.
MANUFACTORY:
Wallingford, Conn.
R. WALLACE & SONS MANUFACTURING CO., SILVERSMITHS.
NO. 226 FIFTH AVENUE, BETWEEN 2eiH AND 27th STREETS, ADJOINING VICTORK HOTEL.
585
KINSLEYS CHICAGO
ESTABI.ISHEO 1865.
CABLE. ADDRESS
•KINSLEY NEW YORK"
An exquisite Italian Renaissance building'. Ten stories
hitjh ; 250 feet front. Positively tire-proof.
Ipcifcct Sanitaiv! iplumbinci an? Ventilation. SStcam
1!3cat an6 Electric liiibts in cvcvv IRoom.
Elaborate elevator service. Every modern appliance in
all the details of construction and equipment.
A marvellously beautiful house in the swellest quarter
of New York.
The most perfect restaurant in tlie world.
European iplan JEjclusivelv. 350 IRooms from
$2 up\var^s.
H. M. KINSLEY & BAUMANN.
HOLLAND HOUSE
s.w. Cor. 30th St. Fifth Ave., New York City
lll'lH AVENUh. E.NTKANCE I O HOLLAND HOUSE.
586
MARBLE COLUEGIATE CHURL H. .i ' ( A Hi i-.., (
HOLLAND HOUSE, H. M. KINSLEY & BAUMANN, PROPRIETORS.
FIFTH AVENUE, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF 30th STREET.
587
mr^&ii^
(JOHN J. GIBBONS)
IMPORTERS
Fine China,
Glass 1^^ Pottery.
»m0im*0>i0 ^ mai^g' ^t'^ ^ i UK iJ ^ mm m * ti i * 0i»jiav tm
Fifth Ave. & Thirtieth St.
NEW YORK CITY.
Northwest Corner (opposite Holland House)
And at NEWPORT, R. I.
588
*lir
f^if
OILMAN COLLAMORE & CO., FINE CHINA, GLASS AND POTTERY.
FIFTH AVENUE, NORTHWEST CORNER OF 30th STREET, OPPOSITE HOLLAND HOUSE.
5^9
PARK AVENUE HOTEL
ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF,
Park (4th) Avenue. 32d to 33d Streets,
New York.
American Plan :
$3,50 PER DAY AND UPWARDS.
European Plan
PER DAY AND UPWARDS,
BAGGAGE TRANSFERRED TO AND FROM GRAND
CENTRAL DEPOT FREE OF CHARGE.
Wm. H, Earle & Son,
Proprietors
■u i«. .
Hotel Cambridge
Piftli Avenue and 88d Street
(Southwest Corner)
NEW YORK CITY
... A QUIET HOTEL, ELEGANTLY FUR-
NISHED AND LUXURIOUSLY APPOINTED
. . . CATERING TO THE MOST REFINED
AND MOST FASTIDIOUS PEOPLE
. . . PATRONIZED BY EMINENT PEOPLE
OF BOTH CONTINENTS
PS | P i, l p < ■ B l ip I ■ ■ V - > ■ y^^T^^T" — w v w www t^v i n -y^F-y^ n i m t\
AMERICAN PLAN
Henry Walter, proprietor
(For Sixteen Years Proprietor of the Albemarle)
THE HOTEL CAMBRIDGE, HENRY WALTER, PROPRIETOR.
FIFTH AVENUE, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF 330 STREET.
Charles Whittif.k,
President.
t.YNDE Belknap, H. P. Kin'G,
Vice-Pres. and Gcn'l Manager. Treasurer.
Whittier IVIachine Company
MANUFACTURERS OF
ELEVATORS
PASSENGER and FREIGHT, HYDRAULIC, ELECTRIC, STEAM and 3 E LT
63 STATE STREET, BOSTON
New York Office
93 LIBERTY STREET
Washington Office
526 13th street, N. W.
The Whittier Machine Company's Elevators are in general use in Boston,
and are used in many notable buildings througliout the United States.
NEW YORK CITY BUILDINGS
EQUIPPED WITH THE WHITTIER MACHINE COMPANY'S ELEVATORS, INCLUDE
The Hotel Waldorf,
Ttie most costly and most
luxurious hotel in the world.
The Stewart Ruildingf,
The great office building,
formerly the dry goods es-
tablishment of the late
Alexander T. Stewart.
Mills Building
New York Central & Hudson
River R.R. Co.
New York World.
New York Tribune.
New York Sun.
Home for Aged People.
New York Life Insurance Co.
United States National Bank.
Women's Hospital.
Wells, Fargo & Co.
American Express Co.
Methodist Book Concern.
Havemeyer Sugar Retining
Co.
Marvin Safe Co.
Bloomingdale Brothers.
Austin, Nichols & Co.
American Safe Deposit Co.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
The beautiful white mar-
ble edifice in Madison Sq.
Enoch Morgan Son's Co.
New York Hospital.
New York Steam Co.
New York and Brooklyn
Bridge Co.
New York Steam Heating
and Power Co.
John Stephenson Co.
John Downey.
Robert & Ogden Goelct.
The Welles Building.
The Astor House.
College of Physicians and
Surgeons.
Clinton Hall (the Mercantile
Library).
Hotel Metropole.
The Wilks Building,
Conspicuously situated at
the corner of Broad and
Wall Streets, and surround-
ed by the Stock Exchange.
Dennison Manufacturing Co.
Schermerhorn Building.
The New Wilks Building,
A modern twelve-story
office structure at the south-
west corner of John and
Nassau Streets.
Hearn & Son.
London and Lancashire In-
surance Co.
Manhattan Eye and Ear Hos-
pital.
Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Morton House.
Museum of Natural History.
R. H. Macy & Co.
National Citizens' Bank.
New York Club.
NewYork Homeopathic Med-
ical College and Hospital.
New York Realty Co.
Presbyterian Hospital.
Stevens Building.
St. Luke's Hospital.
St. George Clergy House.
Sun Fire Insurance Office.
Tiffany & Co.
Union Building.
Metropolitan Hotel.
HOTEL WALDORF, GEORGE C. BOLDT, PROPRIETOR.
FIFTH AVENUE, NORTHWEST CORNER OF 33D STREET.
ZMPORTZXTG RBTAZLER
Kid gloves,
BEST PARIS MAKES,
SILK AND LISLE THREAD HOSIERY AND UNDERWEAR.
English Waterproofs, &c.
NOTE THE ADDRESS:
Nos. 1163 and 1165 BROADWAY,
596
597
THE GERLACH — absolutely fireproof and exquisitely sumptuous. American and
European plans. Permanent and transient guests. West Twenty-seventh Street, between
Broadway and Si.xth Avenue. Family Apartments, $800 to $2000 a year. Transient Rates,
$4.00 and nnwards per day on Amei ican plan : $2.00 per day and upwards on European plan.
l-MflOISON 5Q MHJW STnH''HEfltn
Z-CdHDEl IHlum w OUOO oFOM «iiis[
a-fflLMERS THEAIItfll CASINO
4-Dfl I.Y5 IJ EOfN MUSCE
S-STflNOIIRJ . 13 MHO ON SQ
fc-MUNEtt MUSIC HULlMtLDORflOO
7-HESMIINN3TllCln-«£l5 0HYC0(l|)SOMIlC |TZ
a-l.*-j ST. . ifCENTHAlPflBK
GERLACH ROOF VIEWS, SHOWING THE SOCIAL AND COMMERCIAL CENTER OF NEW YORK.
THE GERLACH HOTEL, Nos. 49 TO 55 West 27th St., just West of Broadway.
The Gerlach is an elegant structure, absolutely fireproof, furnished and <^'l"jPP^dwi^th every con-
venience that can add to the comfort and enjoyment of its guests. »«««•■« f'^bats possible for
luxuriousness In furnishings and delight in cuisine. It is ocated m the '"'^"?'^', ««. .^f^„^f '^^^ "f",^
business portion of New York. Rooms en suite or singly, with or ^vlthout private bathrooms, electric
lights, elevators, etc. '■"' -r = ""-" ==^oo,rTon
CHARLES A. GERLACH, PROPRIETOR.
590
ft
(,
S t
? ^ T
.^v^ v,f /-ii^
'^ '"? "^J
ri7l
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i4i
^ ^ ^^ i]:ilii
3 i 7t - 2, it;]
^1*
,.\;.\'«i.V.vt^>,©,c&cc.cp rr rr rr rn
'^
\\ \ v^ \ \\ ' \\
%
/'«iB£
#" "'^
^25
THE BELGRAVIA; FIRE-PROOF APARTMENT HOUSE.
FIFTH AVENUE, NORTHEAST CORNER OF 49th STREET. PROPERTY OF THE KEMP ESTATE.
627
Tl TI^HTf i-~?-''''i"'' llillll-^
THE KEMP FIRE-PROOF APARTMENT HOUSE ON FIFTH AVENUE.
NOS. 615 AND 617 FIFTH AVENUE, EAST SIDE, BETWEEN 497H AND 60th STREETS.
628
6at)
632
L Jt
633
634
mmm
I* 5
^
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PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH EDIFICES.
ST. LUKE'S. ST. MICHAEL'S. ST. THOMAS' ZION AND ST. TIMOTHY. ST. MARY THE VIRGIN.
635
MISS BROWN'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS
Located at 713, 715 and 717 Fifth Avenue,
BETWEEN 55TH AND 56TH STREETS.
[t is conducted by Miss Annie Brown, a graduate of Vassar, and one of
the most capable educators in tliis field of work. In all the improved methods
of education and the demands of a progressive period, this school stands in the
front rank. Its aim is to provide thorough systematic training. There may
be differences of opinion as to what subjects should be taught ; there can be
little question as to the requirements for good teaching in any line. Parents
have the right to expect that a school should give habits of intelligent study,
promptness, and accuracy of thought and speech. Every department is
provided with a competent and experienced teacher, possessing the highest
grade of qualifications. In that of modern languages six native instructors
are employed and five in the college preparatory course. There are twenty-
live instructors in all, at the head of whom presides Miss Brown.
Three courses of study are open : the regular course to graduation, the
preparatory course to Vassar, Radcliff'e, Barnard, Wellesley, Bryn Mawr and
Smith, and the special course for those who have graduated elsewhere, or who
desire to stud)^ special branches. Careful attention is given each student,
and her peculiar aptitudes and tastes are studied and developed. No strict
rules are made to hamper the pupil's advancement — no marks or awards given
or punishments inflicted — but each is made to feel that the good name of the
school rests with her to maintain. About 150 pupils are annually enrolled.
They are drawn not only from New York City and its environments but from
every quarter of the United States. At frequent intervals the boarders visit
the Lenox Library, the Art Museum, Museum of Natural History, the
Academ)' of Design and other museums and galleries.
Thorough work is done in the primary and preparatory departments
where the pupils are day scholars who expect to complete the course.
Through their consistent development Miss Brown aims at a high standard
in all the advanced classes, for the strength of the school lies in the unity of
the dav-school.
636
MISS BROWN'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS.
Nos 713, T.b AND 717 FIFTH AVENUE, BETWEEN 65TH AND 56rH STREETS,
f'37
638
»\ .^^-^ ^-^"'
639
THE PLAZA - -
" Model Hotel of the World '
.••THE PLAZA ••■
Fifth Ave., 58th & 59th Sts,
Main Entrance to, and fronting Central Park
NEW YORK CITY
AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLANS
Absolutely Fire Proof
Easily accessible by all surface and elevated roads ; cross-town cars
pass the door, intersecting all lines
F. A. HAIVIIVIOND
D40
41
641
CENTRAL PARK VIEWS.
CASINO. LOVER3I WALK. ROCK TUNNEL. THE MALL. EAGLE CAGE.
642
'""'^^*-,
Jj
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. ' 1 ' il 'P. . T ' i
" c^ " ^pi, ^'^1
I <
m.
HOTEL SAVOY.
FIFTH AVENUE, SOUTHEAST CORNER 59TM STREF.T, OPPOSITE MAIN ENTRANCE TO CENTRAL PARK.
643
;:\ MlTlTERIoR-DECoRATlon ATiD-raRriisniriGs ( '2^
p%^l^
I Have Decorated and Furnished
The Executive Mansion,
washington, d. c.
Also the Homes of
HON. WILLIAM WINDOM
(late SecretaryU.S. Treasury)
MRS. JOHN A. LOGAN.
CAPT. GEORGE E. LEMON,
DANIEL B. CLARK,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
MRS. JOHN S. GILLMAN,
BALTIMORE, MD.
GEN. HORACE PORTER,
MILO M. BELDING,
H. L. JUDD,
J. L. EDDY,
JAMES RAYMOND,
IMPERIAL HOTEL,
HOTEL NETHERLAND,
NEW YORK CITY.
JOHN ARBUCKLE,
JERE JOHNSON, JR.,
J. G. DETTMER,
HENRY C. HULBERT,
EUGENE G. BLACKFORD,
MONTROSE W. MORRIS,
JOHN H. LYON,
BROOKLYN.
JAMES A. POTTER,
I. B. MASON,
PROVIDENCE, R. I.
GEN. J. J. ESTEY,
BRATTLEBORO, VT.
GEO. S. BARTON,
ALEXANDER DE WITT,
WORCESTER, MASS.
AND SCORES OF OTHERS.
MAKE YOUR HOME BEAUTIFUL.
U then becomes the most attractive place on earth to yourself and
to those you love. It need not involve a large expenditure.
TASTE, ORIGINALITY and NOVELTY
Are required in the Smart Furnishings of Modern Homes.
Corrcsponch'iicc and interviews invited.
E. S. Yergason.
FIFTH AVENUE HOTEL,
NEV»^ YORK CITY.
644
fer-
^'.. 'j» ? ^' ^
■:-^'
EQUIPPED WITH HER20G TELESEMES. NEW FURNISHINGS BY E. S. VERGASON.
HOTEL NETHERLAND, STAFFORD & WHITAKER, PROPRIETORS.
FIFTH AVENUE, NORTHEAST CORNER OF 59th STREET, AT MAIN ENTRANCE TO CENTRAL PARK.
645
646
647
9 9 9
What is Home without
Ul/inri'
King's Handbook of New York City?"
A T its small cost 3'ou can find no article of ornament or pleasure
which gives to the whole household so much information, grati-
fication and relaxation as is afforded by a copy of " King's Handbook
of New York City." Not only the folks at home, but your guests and
your visitors will heartily enjoy it. It costs only two dollars, and
after it has been in the house awhile each member of the family will
know more about the city in which you live and of which you are a
part than the whole combined family knew before. It is not a mere
glimpse at the city; it is a thorough and accurate description of the
whole metropolis arranged into chapters by tojiics, which are subdi-
vided into paragraphs by institutions or subjects, and at the close is
an elaborate alphabetically arranged index, giving instant access to
any bit of desired information. Embodied in these 1008 ])ages of
information, historical and descriptive, are 1029 photographic illus-
trations, which never fail to interest old and young people, for it
instantly makes known to them buildings, views and institutions which
they would otherwise pass by unnoticed. Just as one who is unable
to distinguish between the thousands of shades, colors, shapes and
varieties of the foliage or flowerage and other bits of nature, fails to
find delight in the country, so, too, the resident or visitor who does
not know the thousands of objects of interest of every conceivable
character, is not likely to find delight in the city. Know your city
and its wonders, and you must surely take pride in being a citizen.
Get " King's Handbook " and you will soon know your city.
MOSES KING, Publisher, Boston, Mass.
649
1^<
650
651
n]i-
nj^j i^sssi ij / ; J; J^^
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This Is a 'safe and profitable Investment for You.
Cass I^ealty Corporation,
{Iiicorporalcd under the lazes of the Slate of Neze York.)
Lidpitdl Invested In productive I^eal Estate In J\[ew
York City.
THE VERY BEST PLACE TO PUT
YOUR MONEY.
Common jStock pays six per cent, a year.
Preferred ^tock five per cent, a year.
Dividends paid quarterly.
jShares ©HC IfDUnbVCb iDoUaVS each.
Payments may be made In small amounts when desired,
for which Certificates will be Issued.
Call or address,
President,
j^o. 503 Fifth /I venue,
N. E. Cor. 42rf Street,
J^ew York City.
654
CS5
H. D.WADE&CO.
Manufacturers of : : : : tT^
BLACKS COLORED 2?
«4ii^
Printing |nks
For Domestic Use and Export,
i.
28 READE ST. - - NEW YORK,
Inks for •• ••• ••• ••• •••
lY)] Ha lf-Tone and A rt W ork
\V_y a Specialty.
656
/
CENTRAL PARK SKATING POND.
IN FRONT OF THE DAKOTA APARTMENT HOUSE
CENTRAL PARK BOAT-HOUSE AND LAKE
NEAR THE MALL.
CENTRAL PARK STATUES, BUSTS AND ORNAMENTS.
GEN. BOLIVAR. ALEXANDER HAMILTON. THE POET SCHILLER. FROF. r/ORSE. THE FALCONER. THE STILL HUNT.
CENTRAL PARK STATUES AND ORNAMENTAL WORK.
'ILGRIM FATHERS. 7rH REGIMENT WAR MONUMENT. INDIAN HUNTER. EAGLES. COMMERCE. LIONESS. AN ARCH.
CENTRAL PARK ORNAMENTAL STRUCTURES.
THE BELVEDERE. THE CAVE. BOAT-HOUSE ON BIG LAKE. MUSIC STAND.
t6o
^vSvoo^-^^. "i
CENTRAL PARK STATUES AND BUSTS.
SHAKESPEARE. WEBSTER. HUMBOLDT. BEETHOVEN. BURNS. SCOTT. MOORE. HALLECK. MAZZINI.
\^^ W. GRA
iOF (Elflf nUK)
GRAHAME ROSS, General Manager.
/%
5?
GENERAL OFFICES and SALE REPOSITORY,
Cor. Seventh Ave. and 55th Street, New York.
HORSES OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS
BOUGHT AND SOLD
ON COMMISSION ONLY.
REGULAR
COMBINATION SALES
OF HIGH CLASS
SADDLE and HARNESS
HORSES
Every MONDAY
DURING THE YEAR.
SALES OF
Thoroughbred
Yearlings
BY ELECTRIC LIGHT
A SPECIALTY.
SPECIAL SALES
OF HIGH CLASS
SADDLE and HARNESS
HORSES
CONDUCTED AT
REGULAR INTERVALS
DURING the SEASON.
SPECIAL AND COMBINATION SALES OF
HJGHBRED TROTTING HORSES,
CONDUCTED
AT THE CONVENIENCE OF CONSIGNORS.
From the New York Herald.
" People like to go to Tattersalls, not only because of the admirable order and com-
fort of the place, but also because its reputation for straightforward agency between buyer
and seller is firmly established. The attractive interior, easy seats and well-conducted
caf^ make it a pleasant place to visit even though one does not intend to buy."
ADDRESS
TATTERSALLS (OF NEW YORK) LIMITED,
Cor. 7th Ave. and 55th Street, NEW YORK.
W. GRAHAME ROSS. GENERAL Managcf
m:
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TATTERSALLS (OF NEW YORK) LIMITED.
EXTERiOR-SEVENTH AVENUE, NORTHEAST CORNER OF 65th STREET.
TATTERSALLS lOF NEW YORK) LIMITED.
INTERIOR SEVENTH AVENUE, NORTHEAST CORNER OF B.'iTH STREET.
663
Central Park Safe Deposit Company
LOCATED IN TH ti
CENTRAL PARK APARTMENT BUILDINGS,
58th Street and Seventh Avenue,
NeNv York.
DIRECTORS
JAMES JENNINGS WIcCOMB,
WILLIAM BARBOUR,
WELCOME G. HITCHCOCK,
HORACE E. GARTH
ALMON GOODWIN,
H. C COPELAND,
THOMAS H. HUBBARD.
H. M. ANTHONY.
SAMUEL W. MIL BANK.
JAMES M. VARNUM,
FRANK M. DAVIS.
J. SCOTT MnCOMB,
DAVID J. McCOMB.
Owner Central Park Apartment Buildings
President Barbour Flax Spinning Company
- of W. G. Hitchcock & Co-, Importers
President Mechanics National Bank
of Vanderpoel, Cuming & Goodwin
President Riverside Bank
of Butler, Stillman & Hubbard
Manufacturers' Agent
of Varnum & Harrison
. . . OFFICERS . . .
JAMES JENNINGS McCOMB, Prcsidcnt. DAVID J. McCOMB, Secretary.
HORACE E. GARTH, Vice-President. JOHN R. McCOMB, Treasurer and Manager.
Security Safes, $5.00 per year. Silver Cabinets, $10 00 per year. Trunks Stored. 25c. per month.
CENTRAL PARK ENTRANCE,
FIFTY NINTH STREET AND SEVENTH AVENUE.
664
66s
New York's Newest, Daintiest and most Charming Hotel
THE MARIE ANTOINETTE,
GRAND BOULEVARD AND SIXTY-SIXTH STREET,
NEW YORK.
AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLANS.
ABSOLUTELY FIRE-PROOF.
A. EUGENE KIRBY, Proprietor.
Note. — The New York Ti-ibune recently
gave a two-ccilumn description of the new-
est of the grand New York Hotels — The
Marie Antoinette. Here it is only pos-
sible to reprint the headlines and a few
extracts of the T>ibune''s description :
HOTEL MARIE ANTOINETTE.
The Charm and Refinement of Versailles
Translated to Manhattan Island.
A New White Palace which at least realizes
the Ideals of Discriminating New Yorkers.
An inadequate description of a Beautiful
Structure.
'A new structure has recently been com-
pleted in New York which has benefited
by a happy inspiration. Marie Antoinette
was a brilliant, beautiful woman, but she
was a home-loving queen. The hotel,
which has been so fittingly named after
her, and in illustration of all that is most
e-xquisite in life, realizes the best ideas of
art and comfort.
"Approaching the Hotel Marie Antoi-
nette from the Sixty-sixth Street station of
the Elevated Road, the effect produced
upon the observer is that of some beau-
tiful building from the White City of the
World's Fair. The proportions of the
building are such as to give the effect of
lieight, without appenring to scrape the
sky, and standing on the corner with ample
frontage, both on the Boulevard and Sixty-
sixth Street, it is massive and substantial.
" The Tribune man, as he passed through
the beautiful wrought-iron gates into the
main hall which led to the restaurant and
dining-room on the right, and the private
dining-room, ante-chamber and drawing-
room on the left, was fairly at a loss where
to begin his description of a unique edifice.
It is obvious at a glance that the most
lavish expenditure had been made to bring
about a consistent application of the best
art principles adapted to the conveniences
and requirements of modern life.
"Take, for instance, the main dining-
room. Is there just such a room in all New
York, and, indeed, anywhere.' A room
neither too square nor too long, supported
by columns of colored alabaster, heightened
with gold Corinthian capitals. The color
scale of the walls, modulating through suc-
cessive tints of rose and crush strawberry,
suitably harmonized from ceiling to floor,
diffuses the brightest kind of rose-colored
light suddenly relieved by the rich dark
green of the portieres which shut off the
street. These portieres, serving in them-
selves an eminently useful purpose, also
suf^gest and introduce the contrast between
the dining-room and the drawing-room,
which has already been given a name — the
Oak Room.
" The Oak Room of the Hotel Antoinette
will long be one of the things to see in
New York. Every piece is an heirloom.
What would not Henry Irving give for
even two or three of these old "pieces,"
some of them costing a small fortune, with
which to stage the palace of the king in
some play of Shakespaare ? But, beautiful
as they are, they serve a fundamental pur-
pose. The oak room suggests the repose
of home, just as the dining-room, in rose
and gold, suggests the gayety of social life
in this great commercial city of ours, fast
becoming the greatest commercial city of
the world.
" What should be said of the restaurant,
which is only second to the dining-room in
impiirtance because of being somewhat
smaller in size? Here the same charm of
color and ot light. You feel that this room
is a little cosier, perhaps, than the dining-
hall, l)ut it IS quite up to the standard, and
that is saying a good deal. A unique fea-
ture of the restaurant, and one which gives
its own character to the total effect, is the
introduction of shaded electric lamps, com-
ing up through the middle of each table,
like flowers of light. The value of light,
and as much light as possible, has been
fully appreciated by the experienced men
who have planned and carried out the
Hotel Marie Antoinette."
4J\ r)^
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HOTEL MARIE ANTOINETTE, A. EUGENE KIRBV PROPRIETOR.
BOULEVARD, NORTHWEST CORNER OF 66lH STREET
667
I\ew Yo»^^ Qollege of Pharmacy,
^
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Bet.
68th STREET,
9th Ave. and the Boulevard.
c
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY, 209 EAST 23d STREET
toLD BUILDING, OCCUPIED UNTIL I894X
HIS useful institution is of interest not
only for its prominence among scientific
schools, but as the incentive to essential
reforms in the practice of phnrmacy, and in the
thorough education of men to compound and
dispense medicines throughout the land. The
College of Pharmacy was founded in 1829 and
incorporated in 1S31. For many years it occupied
a building in 23d Street, but in 1894 it began
to occupy its present commodious, well-equipped,
modern fire-proof edifice on 68th Street, near the
Boulevard. It originated in modest beginnings
and slowly developed through the unaided efforts
of a small group of .earnest New York druggists,
many of whom have now passed away. It was
t. H B :. maintained in spite of many difficulties and dis-
■^ I W couragements, and stands to-day as an enduring
monument of the patience and perseverance of
the founders and the liberality and ability of their
successors. Years ago the application of tests in
due course by a student, who has since filled the
p)resident'3 chair, led to the discovery of the most
audacious frauds by some unprincipled importers and wholesalers, who supplied the western
and southern druggists. The members, espousing the cause of pure drugs, promoted to the
presidency the one who, from purely philanthropic motives, had besn most active in ferret-
ing out these frauds, and against whom the guilty parties instituted suits for his action,
although he waged war solely against a flagrant abuse and not at all against individuals.
During his presidency the College was actively instrumental in bringing about the benefi-
cent law of 1848, prohibiting the importation of adulterated, deteriorated, inferior or
spurious drugs. To enforce these he called the committees in 1851 that initiated the
American Pharmaceutical Association, which now has 1600 members.
The principles enunciated by this College in its requirements for graduation, and in
its code of ethics, have been generally adopted by other pharmaceutical bodies. It partici-
pates regularly in the decennial revi.sion of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. In 1883 it promulgated
the N. Y. and Brooklyn Formulary, which has been further elaborated to form the " National
Formulary," published by the American Pharmaceutical Association. A brilliant record,
especially for so modest an institution that few e.xcept those concerned know of its existence.
The officers for the current year are as follows: President, Semuel W. Fairchild ; Vice-
Presidents, Prof. Charles F. Chandler, George Massey and John Caswell ; Treasurer,
Horatio N. Fraser ; Secretary, J. Niven Hegeman ; and Trustees, Charles Holzhauer, Wm.
M. Massey, Wm. Jay Schieffelin, Charles F. Schleussner, Henry Schmid, Samuel J. Bendiner,
Theodore Louis, Thomas F. Main, Domingo Peraza, Reuben R. Smith, Hermon W. Atwood,
Thomas J. Macmahan, Gustavus Ramsperger, Charles Rice, George B. Wray. The faculty
comprises ten members, including four professors— Charles F. Chandler, Arthur H. Elliott,
Henry H. Rusby, Virgil Coblentz — and six instructors, besides whom there are many special
lecturers. The institution covers a complete course, theoretical and practical, and the lec-
tures, quizzes and laboratory work include all the important subjects necessary or desirable
for the pharmacist.
NEW YORK COLLEGE OF PHARMACY.
NO. 116 WEST 68rH STREET, NORTH SIDE, BETWEEN COLUMBUS AVENUE AND THE BOJIEVARO.
£69
'*^^^i^.
TWELFTH REGIMENT ARMORY.
COLUMBUS AVENUE, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF 61ST STREET.
COLLEGIATE REFORMED CHURCH.
WEST END AVENUE AND 77TH STREET.
670
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672
673
TOMB OF GENERAL U. S. GRANT.
RIVERSIDE PARK.
■m
HARLEM RIVER.
LOOKING EAST FROM WASHINGTON BRIDGE.
674
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"•sa?^^'
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675
676
677
JAY GOULD'S MAUSOLEUM, AT WOODLAWN CEMETERY.
H. Q. FRENCH,
A X 1 >
The Smith Granite Comply
OF WESTERLY. R. I.
The Largest Concern in this Industry in this Country.
Mausoleums
^^^ Monuments
OF THE HIGHEST ORDER,
No. 186 Fifth Avenue,
(MADISON SQUARE),
Southwest coiner of 23d Street,
NEW YORK.
678
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WOODLAWN CEMETERY.
WOODLAWN STATION, NEW YORK i HARLEM RAILROAD.
6/9
THE CRAWFORD (HARLEM) SHOE STORE,
No. 216 WEST 125TH STREET, BETWEEN SEVENTH AND EIGHTH AVENUES.
Crawford Shoe Stores in New York:
Broadway and Fourteenth St.
Broadway and Twelfth St.
Broadway, No. 177 (Near Cortlandt St.>
West 125th St., No. 216 (Harlem.)
The Crawford Shoe for Men Only.
Custom Made, . . 56.00
Hand Made. . . . 5.00
Hand Sewed. . . 4.00
French Welt, . . . 3.00
The Crawford Shoe is sold only to the Wearer.
It is never sold to dealers.
It can be obtained only at our own
Crawford Shoe Stores,
in the principal American cities.
BLACKWELL'S ISLAND INSTITUTIONS.
THE CHARITY HOSPITAL, PENITENTIARY WORKSHOPS, AND CHURCHES.
6S2
SCENES ON BLACKWELL'S ISLAND.
THE ALMS-HOUSE CHAPEL, OLD BLACKWELL RESIDENCE, AND OTHER BUILDINGS.
t^-^
TEMPLE EMANU-EL, HEBREW SYNAGOGUE.
FIFTH AVENUE, NORTHEAST CORNER OF 43o STREET.
MOSES KING,
BOSTON, MASS.
Publisher
King's Handbook of New York City.
1008 Pages; 1029 Illustrations. - - $2.00
Ring's Handbook of the United States.
2700 Illustrations; 940 Pages; 51 Maps. $3.00
King's Handbook of Boston.
1008 Pages; 1000 Illustrations. - - $2.00
King's "Where to Stop: A Hotel Guide,"
400 Illustrations; 192 Pages.
25 CTS.
685
Partial List of very iiigli Buildings in New York City
provided with OTIS Elevators.
* All those marked with
*Aldrich Court.
*American Tract Society.
*Astor Building.
*Bank of America.
*Bennett Building.
*Broadway Central Hotel.
*Brooklyn Life Insurance Co.
Brown Brothers & Co.
*Cable Building-.
*Central R. R. of New Jersey.
*Central Trust Co.
*Columbia Building.
*Commercial Union Assur. Co.
*Continental National Bank.
Corbin Building.
*Criminal Courts Building.
♦Dakota Apartment House.
*Del. Lack. & W. R. R. B'ld'g.
Dunham, Buckley & Co. B'ld'g.
Eagle Building.
Ehrich Brothers.
Emigrant Industrial Savings B'k.
♦Farmers' Loan and Trust Co.
Fulton Building.
*Hanover Fire Insurance Co.
*Havemeyer Building.
Hays Building.
♦Holland House.
♦Hotel Imperial.
♦Hotel Majestic.
♦Hotel Savoy.
Hoyt Building.
^Imperial Fire Insurance Co.
♦Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
♦Lancashire Fire Insurance Co.
♦Lawyers' Title Insurance Co.
♦Liverpool and London and Globe Ins. E
♦Madison Square Garden.
♦"Mail and E.xpress " Building.
♦Manhattan Life Insurance Co.
♦Manhattan Elevated Railway.
Manice Building.
♦Market and Fulton National Bank.
are illustrated in this book.
♦Metropolitan Lite Insurance Co.
♦Metropolitan Telephone and Tel. Co.
Spring Street Station.
Broad Street Station.
Thirty-ninth Street Station.
♦Metropolitan Trust Co.
♦Mills Building.
Morris Building.
♦Morse Building.
♦Mutual Life Insurance Co.
♦Mutual Reserve Building.
Nassau Chambers.
♦National Shoe and Leather Bank.
♦Netherland Hotel.
♦New York Coffee Exchange.
♦New York Cotton Exchange.
♦New York Life Insurance Co.
♦New York Produce Exchange.
♦New York "Times."
♦New York "World."
Park and Tilford Building.
Pierce Building.
♦Plaza Hotel.
♦Potter Building.
Presbyterian Building.
♦Charles Broadway Rouss.
♦Seaman's Bank for Savings.
Sheldon Building.
St. Luke's Hospital.
♦Standard Oil Co. Building.
Stern Brothers.
Stokes Building.
♦Temple Court.
♦Union League Club.
♦Union Trust Co.
♦United Bank Building.
Idg. ♦United Charities Building.
♦United States Bank Building.
♦United States Trust Co.
♦Vanderbilt Building.
♦Washington Building.
♦Western Union Telegraph Co.
♦Williamsburgh City Fire Ins. Co.
Otis Brothers & Co.
38 Park Row, New Y(M-k.
''^^^^r^w^'
687
CHICAGO,
133 & 135 Wabash Ave
LONDON,
23 Fore St., E. C.
THE
ANSONIA CLOCK COMPANY,
II CLIFF STREET,
p. O. BOX 2304,
NEW YORK.
Gable Address ''ANSONIA."
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697
ONLY
TWO DOLLARS
FOR
A THOUSAND
JUST THINK OF IT ! !
Two dollars is the whole cost of one thousand
photographic views of the important and interesting
features of all New York City. These one thousand
illustrations are embodied in one thousand pages of
text giving an outline history and thorough description
of the foremost city on the American Continent. These
one thousand pictures and one thousand pages of
text are beautifully printed on superfine book paper,
and are handsomely bound in solid cloth and gilt covers.
All together formine " Kind's Handbook of New York
City," a volume worthy of a place in anybody's home.
You can get it by merely sending to Moses King,
P.O. Box 2113, Boston, Mass., its low price of
TWO DOLLARS.
(=199
THE NEXT THREE BUILDINGS,
Henry G. Marquand's Residence,
Seventh Regiment Armory,
Union League Club,
ARE COVERED WITH
Warren's Anchor Brand
Natural Asphalt Roofing,
liM THE FOURTH,
The New York Wool Exchange
THE ASPHALT FLOORS, AMOUNTING
TO OVER 70,000 SQUARE FEET,
ARE LAID WITH ; ; : ; :
ANCHOR BRAND
WARREN'S
MASTIC : : :
WARREN CHEIVIICAL& MANT^G CO
Market and Fulton Bank Building, NEW YORK.
701
ADVANTAGES Of
Warren's Anchor Brand
Natural Asphalt Roofing
OVER —
COAL TAR ROOFING.
First; — Very mucli greater durability, caused principally by the fact that the oils in the
Asphalt are non-volatile at any natural temperature, and the Anchor Brand Cement, there-
fore, does not dry up and become brittle under exposure to sun and air, as Coal Tar Pitch does,
in which the oils are very volatile.
Second : — The Anchor Brand Cement will not run, it being less affected by the heat of the
sun than Coal Tar Pitch.
Third: — The Anchor Brand Cement has more body than Coal Tar Pitch, and is a very
much stronger and more tenacious cement.
FoiiRTH : — An Anchor Brand roof emits no disagreeable odor, and does not injure rain
water.
Advantages of Warren's Anchor Brand Natural Asphalt Roofing
OVER TIN ROOFING.
CHE APIS ESS.
First:— The first cost of the Anchor Brand roof is less. While tin roofs are offered in all
parts of the country at from $4.00 to $9.00 per square, the best grades of tin plate cannot be laid
for less than the latter figure.
Second : — The Anchor Brand Roof requires no e.xpense for its continued preservation,
while tin must be frequently painted.
Third :— The cost of painting a tin roof during its lifetime, added to the already greater
tirst cost, makes it far more expensive than an Anchor Brand roof for the same length of time.
DITRABII.IXY.
First: — An Anchor Brand roof is not injuriously affected by the changes in temperature,
while the contraction and expansion of a tin roof under similar circumstances are often sufficient
to cause it to buckle, and leak at the seams.
Second : — An Anchor Brand roof requires no attention to insure its durability. A tin roof,
on the contrary, should the painting be neglected, rapidly deteriorates.
Third : — An Anchor Brand roof, where subjected to gases, acids or moisture from beneath,
is far more durable than a tin roof, which, under these conditions, is almost worthless.
Fourth :— An Anchor Brand roof is more substantial than a tin roof, and less easily injured
by being walked upon, and by other external causes.
Fifth : — An Anchor Brand roof offers a much more thorough protection from fire either
from within or without the building than does a tin roof, as the latter quickly unsolders, admit-
ting a draft of air, while the former remains perfectly air tight.
WARREN CHEMICAL & MAN'F'G CO.
Market and Fulton Bank Building, New York.
7°3
AMONG THE MANY NOTABLE BUILDINGS COVERED WITH
Warren's
Anchor Brand Natural Asphalt
Roofing
ARE THE FOLLOWING:
J. N. Adam & Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Strong's Mill, Cohoes, N. Y.
Harmony Mills, Cohoes, N. Y.
New York Central & Hudson River R.R.
West Shore Railroad.
Pennsylvania Railroad.
Toledo, St. Louis & Kansas City Railroad.
Flint & Pare Marquette Railroad.
Boston & Albany Railroad.
Standard Sugar Refinery, Boston, Mass.
Mt. Vernon Church, Boston, Mass.
Hotel Cluny, Boston, Mass.
Hotel Edinburgh, Boston, Mass.
Codman Building, Boston, Mass.
Flint Mills, Fall River, Mass.
Union Mills, Fall River, Mass.
Kerr Thread Co., Fall River, Mass.
American Printing Co., and Iron Works Mills,
Fall River, Mass.
Richard Borden Mill, Fall River, Mass.
Stafford Mill, Fall River, Mass.
Thomson-Houston Electric Co., Lynn, Mass.
Thomson Electric Welding Co., Lynn, Mass.
S. N. Breed & Co., Lynn, Mass.
Lynn Electric Light & Gas Co., Lynn. Mass.
Bennett M'f'g Corporation & Columbia Co.,
New Bedford, Mass.
Pierce M'f'g Co., New Bedford, Mass.
Wamsutta Mills, New Bedford, Mass.
Washburn & Moen M'f'g Co. , Worc'st'r, Mass.
Knowles Loom Works, Worcester, Mass.
Holyoke Machine Co., Holyoke, Mass.
Parsons Paper Co., Holyoke, Mass.
Deane Steam Pump Co., Holyoke, Mass.
Pittsfield Electric Light & Gas Co., Pittsfield,
Mass.
Salem Electric Light & Power Co., Salem,
Mass.
Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co., Salem, Ma.ss.
Fisher M'f'g Co., Fisherville, Mass.
New England Telegraph & Telephone Co.,
Boston, Mass.
C. Cowles & Co., New Haven, Conn,
yuinnipiac Brewing Co., New Haven, Conn.
Pratt & Cady Co., Hartford, Conn.
P. & F. Corbin, New Britain, Conn.
Cheney Bros., South Manchester, Conn.
Brown University, Providence, R. L
Conant Thread Co., Pawtucket, R. L
Chamber of Commerce B'ld'g, Detroit, Mich.
Home Savings Bank Building, Detroit, Mich.
Leonard & Carter Building, Detroit, Mich.
Detroit Electric Light Plant, Detroit, Mich.
W. F. Dewey Co. Apartments, Toledo, O.
The Nasby, Toledo, O.
The Monticello, Toledo, O.
The National Union Building, Toledo, O.
Herdman Sash, Door & Lumber Co., Zanes-
ville, O.
Muskingum Coffin Co., Zanesville, O.
American Encaustic Tile Co., Zanesville, O.
Pullman Building, Chicago, 111.
The Hazen M'f'g Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.
Cin. Ice M'f'g and Cold Storage Co., Cincin-
nati, Ohio.
American E.xpress Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.
Cin. Music Verein Co.. Cincinnati, Ohio.
Mabley & Carew, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Christian Moerlein Brewing Co., Cincinnati,
Ohio.
L'nion Central Life Insurance Co., Cincin-
nati, Ohio.
Cincinnati Electric Light Co., Cincinnati,
Ohio.
H. Lackman Brewing Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.
American Cotton Oil Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.
St. Nicholas Hotel, Cincinnati, Ohio.
United Bank Building, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Dayton & LInion R.R. Co., Dayton, Ohio.
Third Street R.R. Co., Dayton, Ohio.
Dayton Malleable Iron Co., Dayton, Ohio.
The Old National Bank, Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Hotel Randall, Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Pennsylvania Railroad Shop, Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Morris Building, 15irraingham, Ala.
County Jail, Birmingham, Ala.
William A. Walker, Birmingham, Ala.
Buyck & Thomas, Birmingham, Ala.
Florence Hotel. Birmingham, Ala.
Syndicate Building, Talladega, Ala.
Phoeni.\ Tobacco Warehouse, Louisville, Ky.
Phcenix Storage Warehouse, Louisville, Ky.
Kentucky National Bank, Louisville, Ky.
Canada Life Association Bldg., Toronto, Can.
Canadian Bank of Commerce, Toronto, Can.
London & Canadian Loan & Agency Co.,
Toronto, Can.
Toronto University, Toronto, Can.
Board of Trade Building, Toronto, Can.
Parliament Building, Halifa.x, N. S.
FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS, ADDRESS
WARREN CHEMICAL AND MANUFACTURING CO.,
Market and Fulton Bank Building-, New York.
704
PEABODY & STEARNS, ARCHITECTS
ROOFED BY WAHHEN CHEMICAL A MANUFACTUMING CO.
THE UNION LEAGUE CLUB.
FIFTH AVENUE, NORTHEAST CORNER OF 39rH STREET.
7°5
The following letter refers to a piece of roof wUicU wo cxlilbitcd at the World's Fair,
Chicago, 1803, where we received the Highest Award for " XATVRAL ASPHALT ROOFlNa
MATERIALS AND KOOFS. • ^VAHKLN CHK.MICAL AM> MAMFACTUlMXa CO.
gA;^_B^^— ^^^<<^
sew yORKCENTRAliH RRR
MAIN LINEAND BRANCHES
NEWYORK i HARLEM RR
MAINLINEAND BPANCmCS
WEST SHORE RR
wallmill valley r r
kew jersey junction rr
dunkirk.allechehy valley
{■pittsburgh rr
B wa O R H
'l^'^y/'.J-/{?r/€^(^
_%r._13th^J893/;^_._
Warren Chemical & M'F'G Co.
81-83 Fulton Street. New York City.
Gentlemen: --
This is to certify that this piece of roof was
cut from the roof of the West Shore Railroad freight house. Pier
2, Weeliawken, N. J., on April 4th, 1893. This building was covered
in the Summer of 1882 with Warren's Anchor Brand Natural Asphalt
Roofing; it has thus stood the wear of eleven years, has given
perfect satisfaction, and is now in excellent condition.
Two Pier Sheds were covered with this material, one is 20O
by 775 and the other is 200 x 1350.
Both roofs are in good condition, and to all appearances are
likely to last from ten, to fifteen years longer. The asphalt roof-
ing cement retains its elastic qualities to a remarkable extent.
Approved,
Yours truly,
'^ ^ Architect
Chief Engineer,
N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co.
706
■ILLIAM B. TUBBY, ARCHITECT,
AM M/.i I n OORS PAVED C
NEW YORK WOOL EXCHANGE.
WEST BiiOADWAY, NOSTHWEST CORNER OF EEACH STREET.
707
EN CHEMICAL S, M'f'G CO.
The Hartford
1794—1895.
THE
OLDEST
INSURANCE
COMPANY
IN
HARTFORD.
COMMENCED
BUSINESS IN
1794-
Charter
Perpetual.
FIRE INSURANCE CO.,
Of Hartford, Conn.
Has a Capital ot - One and One-Quarter Million Dollars.
Has a Net Surplus of - Two and One-Half Million Dollars.
The Total Assets amounting to - Over Eight Million Dollars.
Has Paid in Losses - - Over Forty-Six Million Dollars.
president :
GEORGE L. CHASE.
secretary :
P. C. ROYCE.
assistant-secretaries :
THOS. TURNBULL, CHAS. E. CHASE.
NEW YORK managers :
YOUNG & HODGES,
50 Wall Street.
70S
King's Photographic Views of New York.
A SERIES OF 450 ILLUSTRATIONS,
Arranged progressively from the Harbor to Harlem, showing important
institutions, frequented thoroughfares, notable business houses,
public buildings, churches, residences, etc., all together
forming a collection of views that will have
a constantly enhancing value.
In connection with this series of illustrations use should be made of King's Handhodk ok
New York, an elaborate description of the whole city, a superb volume of ilxjS solidly
packed pages of data, accompanied witli 1029 illustrations and 72 columns of minute index.
COl'VKUiHT, 1895, BY MOSES KING.
INDK
Abbey's Theatre, 699.
Academy of Design, National, 573.
Adams & Bishop Co., Paper Mfrs., 318, 319.
.\dams (Peter) Co., Paper Mfrs., 318, 319.
•'Advertiser," Morning and Afternoon, 309, 315.
Ahrenfeldt (Chas.)& Son, Pottery, etc., 304.305.
.\ldrich Court Building, 69.
"America " and " Mercury," 311.
.■\merican Bank Note Co., 1,66, 67, 186, 187, 292.
American Bible Society, 495.
American Book Co., School Books, 499, 503.
.American Champion Gas Lamp Co., 508
American E.xchange National Bank, 183.
American Fire Insurance Co., 227.
.■\merican Grocery Co., 387, 388, 389.
American Institute of Ptirenoloay, 536, 537.
American Line of St'rs, 16, 17, 266, 267, 292, 685.
.'American Museum of Natural History, 528, 672.
American Net & Twine Co., 20.
American News Co., 343.
American Specialty Co., Novelties, 200, 561, 565.
American Sugar Refining Co., Refineries, 144.
American Sugar Ref'g Co., Wall St. Offices, 145.
American Surety Co., 180, 181.
American Tract Society, 326, 327, 568.
Amsinck Building, 59, 152.
Amsinck (G.) & Co., Shipping Merchants, 58, 59.
Ams (Max), Preserves, Fish, etc., 400, 401.
.Anglo-American Drug Co., 474.
Ann Street, 289.
.\nsonia Clock Co., 688, 689.
-Anthony (Henry M.), Mfrs' Agent, 384,385, 664.
Apprentices' Library, 525.
Aquarium, formerly " Castle Garden," 31.
Arch in Central Park, 659.
Armories, 670, 703.
.Army Building, 63.
Arnold, Constable & Co., Dry Goods, 529, 530.
Arnold (Max), Merchant Tailor, 317.
.Assay Office, 99.
Association Hall, Y. M. C. A., 5^3.
Astor Bronze Doors on Trinity (Jliurch, 79.
-Astor Building, 87, 91, 568.
-Astor House, 285.
-Astor's (John Jacob) Residence, 649.
Astor Library. 487 486.
-Astor Place, 486, 487, 489, 491.
Astor Place Bank, 490, 491.
-Astor Place Building (O. B. Potter Trusts, 489.
Atlantic Coast Line, 294, 295.
Atlantic Mutual Insurance ('o., 117, 119, 127.
-Atlas Steamship Line, 28.
Australasian Packets, Peabody's, 36, 37.
Babbitt (B. T.), .Soap Works, 67, 81.
Baker.Smith iV Co.. Heat'g & Ventila'g. 454, 455.
J?altimore & Ohio Railroad, 23C1.
Banana Unloading Scene, 685.
Bank for Savings," 188.
Bank of America, 121, 122, 123, 131, 132.
Bank of Buffalo, Buffalo, N. Y., 34.
Bank of Commerce, 202, 203.
Bank of New Amsterdam, 607.
Bank of New York, 129, 131, 132.
Bank of North -America, 131.
Bank of the Metropolis, 520, 521,
Bankers' Magazine, .90.
Banks tV Brothers, I.aw Publishers, 306, 307.
Baptist Tabernacle, 493.
Barclay Street Ferry, 685.
Barge Office, 29.
Baring, iMagoun & Co., Bankers, 93, 95.
Barnes i.A. S.) & Co.. Publishers, 10.
Bavlholdi (Liberty) St;Uue, 9.
Batjer (H. A.t (S: Co.. Importers, 56, 57.
Battery I'ark and Castle (iarden, 29.
Battery Park, Elevated R.R., Ferries, etc., 20.
Bawo i^ Dotter, Pottery, China, etc , 298, 299.
Baxter Street, 431.
15each at Coney island, 720.
I-ieach Street, 404, 405.
Bcaraan (Charles C), .Attorney, 132, 133, 137.
Beaver Street, 35. 39, 40, 41, 43, 45, 47, 49, 63.
Beddall (K. F.), Manager, 128, 129.
Bedloe's Island, Liberty Statue, 9.
Beethoven Statue, Central Park. 661.
7IO
K/XG S PHOTOGRAPHIC flF.lVS OF NEH^ YORK.
Belgravia Apartment House, 627, 62S.
Belvedere, Central Park. 660.
Benedict Brothers, Jewelers, 254, 255.
Benedict Building, 199, 255, 259.
Benjamin (William Evarts), Publisher, 524.
Bennett Building, 270, 271, 344.
Berkeley Oval, 675.
Berkeley School for Boys, 623, 673.
Berkshire Life Insurance Co., 362, 363, 365.
Berwind's (Edward J.i Residence, 647.
Berwind-White Coal Mining Co., 692, 693.
Berwind-White Coal Piers at Jersey City, 693
Best & Co., Liiiputian Bazaar, 553, 554, 555.
Bible House, 493, 495.
Bierman, Heidelberg & Co., Clothiers, 381.
Bird's-eye View of New York in 1851, 7.
Bird's-eye View of New YorK in 1895, 5.
" Bismarck," Hamburg-Am n Steamship, 26,27.
Bi.xby (S. M.) Sr Co , Blacking, 444, 445.
Blackwell's Island Projected Bridge, 5.
Blackwell's Island Institutions, 682, 683.
Blair's Fountain Pen Co., 195.
Blair & Co., Bankers, Mechanics B'k Bld'g, m.
Bleecker St. Building of O. B. Potter Trust, 475.
Bliven & Carrington. Oils and Grease, 348, 349.
Blizzard Scenes of 1888, 513
Bloodgood (W. E.), Architect, 575.
Boat-house on Big Lake, Central Park, 660.
Boat-house and Lake, Central Park, 657.
Bogle & Scott, Canned Goods, 398, 399.
Bolivar Statue, Central Park, 658.
Borgfeldt (Geo.i&Co .Com. Merchants, 483,481.
Boston Belting Co , Rubber Goods, 36J.
Boston Marine Insurance Co., 121.
" Boston," United States War Ship, 11.
Boulevard, 667.
" Bourgogne," French Line Steamship, 24, 25.
Bouvfe, Crawford & Co., 259, 260, 508, 509, 680.
Bow Bridge in Central Park, 474.
Bowers (Henry E.', Manager, 158.
Bowery, 437, 440, 442, 443. '
Bowery Fire Insurance Co., 443.
Bowery Sivings Bank, 443
Bowling Green, 3, 63
Boyle (John) & Co., Duck, Fabrics, etc., 268, 269
Bradley & Currier Co., Woodwork, 452, 453.
Bradley & Hubbard Mf :^. Co., Metal Goods, 297
" Bradstreet's Journal " 382.
Bradstreet Mercantile Agency, 382, 383.
Brentano s, Periodicals and Books, 518, 522, 523
Bridges, 5, 13, 170,217, 342,353.354. 355,674. 676,677
Bristol Hotel, 622. \
Broad Street, 61, 95, 107, 139.
Broadway Building (O. B. Potter Tr.),499, 503
Broadway Cable Power House, 469.
Broadway Central Hotel, Tilly Haynes, 476 477
Broadway Insurance Co., 197.
Brock's Commercial Agency, 375.
Bronze Doors of Trinity Church, 79.
Brooklyn, 5, 7, 32, 33, 144, 355, 689, 690, 696.
Brooklyn Bridge, 5, 170, 217, 342, 353, 354, 355.
Brooklyn Bridge Cable Cars, 354.
Brooklyn Life Insurance Co., 221, 225.
Brooks Brothers, Clothiers and Tailors, 543.
Brown Brothers & Co., Bankers, loi.
Brown (Timothy Y.), Insurance, 209.
Brown's (Miss) School for Girls, 63b, 637.
Bryant Building, 223, 225.
Buchanan (Dr. J. W.), Dentist, 522, 523.
Buckingham Hotel, Wetherbee & Fuller, 629.
Buffalo, N. Y., 30, 34.
Bulkley, Dunton & Co., Paper Dealers, 412, 413.
Burke (H. E.), Hatter, 265.
Burns Statue, Central Park, 661.
Burt & Packard Shoe Shop, 257, 259.
Butler (Wm. H.), Safes and Vaults, 413.
BROADWAY.
Subject. Page.
Broadway in 1828 3
Broadway at Murray St. in 1863 366
Broadway at its beginning 63
Bird's-eye view of lower part. 293, 331, 345
North from Bowling Green 69
South from Wall Street 85
North from Pine Street 183
North Irom Cedar Street 193
North from Liberty Street 199
South from Cortlandt Street 255
North from Cortlandt Street 257
South from Dey Street 259
North from Dey Street 261
South fro.Ti Fulton Street 263
North from Post-Office 291
North from Barclay Street 295, 300
North from Park Place 363
Noi th from M urray Street 367
South from Chambers Street . . .375, 377
North from Chambers Street 383
South from Canal Street 429
North from Grand Street 461
North from Spring Street 465
North frojn Bleecker Street 477
North from Bond Street 479
North from Grace Church 498
North from nth Street 501
South from 14th Street 511
South from i6th Street 521
North from i6th Street 523
North from i8th Street 527
North from 19th Street 521
South from 20th Street 535
Washington Building 64, 65
George 'W . Sheldon & Co. . . .63, 73, 126
Welles Building 70
LTnited States Check Punch Co.... 396
Standard Oil Building 68
Columbia Building 68
Panama R. R 450, 451
Columbian Line 450, 451
Hamburg- American Line 26, 27
Aldri-h Court 69
Berwind-White Coal Min'g Co., 692, 693
C';ns. Stock and Petroleum E.\change 68
Manhattan Life Insurance Co. .. .69, 73
LTnion Trust Co 68, 74, 75, 85
Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. .84, 85
William Wilson 85
Trinity Church 77
Trinity Bronze Doors 79
United Bank Building 82, 83
National Bank of the Republic 83
Farson, Leach & Co 83
First National Bank 83
American Surety Co 180, 181
Martyr's Monument 177
Trinity Building 77
German-American Ins. Co 184, 185
Boreel Building 185
Home Insurance Co 185
Equitable Life Building 183
Kountze Brothers 182
Niagara Hire Insurance Co 193
C. C. Hine: "Insurance Monitor," 195
Kings County Fire Insurance Co.. 19s
Mutual Life, Broadway B'lding,i83, 227
Singer Manufacturing Co 697
Williamsburg City Fire Ins. Co. . . . 229
Citizens' Fire Insurance Co. .. .196, 197
L. E. Waterman Co 70
Greenwich Insurance Co 198, 199
Benedict Brothers 254, 255
A'/NG'S PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEWS OF NEW YORK.
7"
St. or No
177
183
191
195
203
206,
206,
208,
Subject. rage.
Crawford Shoe Store 260
Milhau's (J.) Son 256, 257
Mercantile National Bank 258, 259
Western Union Telegraph Building 261
" Mail and E.xpress " 262, 263
" Evening Post" 265
" The Nation " 265
New England Mutual Life Ins. Co. 264
Loew Bridge 512
St. Paul's Chapel 285
National Park Bank 286, 287
Atlantic Coast Line 294, 295, 309
Post-Office 2QI, 309
Parkinson 309, 430
City Hall 271, 331
Postal Telegraph Co 331, 365
Commercial Cable Co 719
Berkshire Life Insurance Co 362
Sprague Electic Elevator Co. . .645, 696
A. Schulte 328
Home Life Building 369
Merchants' E.xchange Nat'l Bahk. . 369
Preferred Accident Insurance Co. . 370
I'nited States Life Insurance Co. . , 372
Chemical National Bank 375
National Shoe and Leather Bank. . 375
Southern Railway Co 376, 377
" Piidmont Air Line" 376, 377
Bradstreet Mercantile Ag'ncy,..382. 383
Washington Trust Co 380, 381
Stewart Building 381
Mutual Reserve Fund LifeAss'n.. 409
Tower Manuf'g& Novelty Co. 410, 411
Franklin Typewriter Co 410, 411
Central National Bank 414, 415
Tefift, Weller & Co 416, 417
Southern Pacific Co 446, 447
" Morgan Line " 446, 447
New York Life Insurance Co. ..420, 424
Calhoun, Robbins & Co 428, 429
Gustav G. Lansing 424, 425
Ninth National Bank 427, 426
Mills & Gibb 460, 461
Charles Broadway Rouss 464, 465
Freedman Brothers 466, 467
Cable Building 469
Broadway Central Hotel 476, 477
Hornthal, Weissman & Co 478 479
Grace Church 497
Grace Church Rectory 499
O. B. Potter, Broadway Building, 499
Gustav E. Stechert 502, 503
B. Westermann & Co 504, 505
James McCreery & Co 500, 501
Crawford Shoe Store 508
Roosevelt Building 188
Longley Brothers 510
Crawford Shoe Store 509
Raritan Hollow & Porous Brick Co. 526
Mclntyre Building 527
Arnold, Constable cS: Co .S30
Gorham Manufacturing Co 531
Edward A. Morrison & Son 532, 533
Lord & Taylor 535
Brooks Brothers 543
Fifth Avenue Hotel ... .560, 561
Second National Bank 203
Hoffman House 566, 567
Charles T. Jones 596, 597
Palmer's Theatre 604
Imperial Hotel fioi
Union Dime Sa'gs Institution. .602, 603
Greeley Square 603
Standard Theatre 603
Herald Square 605
St. or No. Subject. Page-
35th St. " New York Herald " 604
38th St. Abbey's Theatre 699
39th St. Casino 699
40th St. Metropolitan Opera House 607
42d St. St. Cloud Hotel 608, 609
Cable Building, 469.
Cable Cars on Brooklyn Bridge, 354.
Cable Power House of Broadway Cable, 469.
Cable Power House of Le.x'gton Av. Cable, 579.
Cady (J. C.) & Co., Architects, 375.
Caesar Brothers, Enameled Letters, 311.
Cafe Savarin, Equitable Building, 183.
Calhoun, Robbins & Co., Dry Goods, 428, 429.
Calvary Church, Protestant Episcopal, 571.
Cambridge Hotel, H. Walter, Prop., 592, 593.
Cammann (H. H.) & Co., Real Estate, 221.
" Campania," Cunard Line Steamer, 21.
Carrfere & Hastings, Architects, 263.
Carter, Hawley & Co., Shipping and Com , 138.
Casino Theatre, 699.
Casino in Central Park, 642.
Cassidy (John), Blank Books, Ruling, etc., 468.
Cassidy & Son, Gas & Electric Fi.xtures, 551.
Cass Realty Corporation, 574, 575, 622, 654, 655.
Cass Realty Corporation, E. 23d St. Block, 575.
Cass Realty Corporation, Lc.x. Ave. Block, 655.
Castle Garden, 5, 7, 29, 31.
Castle Williams, 13.
Castleton Hotel, Staten Island, 612.
Cathedrals, 626, 630, 631, 632, 675.
Cave, Central Park, 660.
Cedar Street, 201, 203, 205, 207, 209, 211, 213, 215.
Central Building, 67, 230, 231, 233, 292.
Central National Bank, 414, 415.
Central Park Apartment Buildings, 664, 665.
Central Park Safe Deposit Co., 664.
Central Park Views, 474, 642, 650, 657, 658, 659,
660, 661, 664, 668, 672.
Central Railroad of New Jersey, 230, 231.
Central Stores, Terminal Ware'se Co., 546, 547.
Central Trust Building, 133, 139.
Century Building, 518, 519.
Chambers Street. 373, 375. 377. 379. 381-
Champlain Hotel, Lake Champlain, 236.
Charities Building, 571, 572.
Chase National Bank, 179.
Chatham Square, 435.
Chelsea Square. 545.
Chemical National Bank, 375, 377.
Che.scbrough Building, 2c.
"Chicago," United States War Ship, 11.
Chinatown, 435.
Choate (Joseph H.), Lawyer, 132, 133, 137.
" Cliristian Advocate " (Methodist), 538, 539.
"Christian Herald," Bible House, 495.
Christman (John), Piano Manufacturer, 507.
Churches, 77, 81, 91, 93, 132, 285, 497, 503, 534,
■^42, 587, 626.
"Churchman," M. H. Mallory & Co., 486, 487.
Church of the Heavenly Rest, Episcopal, 626.
Church Street, 393.
Citizens' Insurance Company, 196, 197.
City Hall, 331, 339. 345. 361, 37°. 37i-
City Hall Park, 329, 331, 339, 343. .347. 301, 363.
365. 367. 369. 370. 373- 379- ^ ^ ,
Claflin (H. B.) Co., Wholesale Dry Goods, 393.
Clark Building, I'ark Row, 311.
Clapp(F<:. !•:.), Kid'tyiS;CasualtyCo., 161, 162, 163.
Clearing House, new, 188, 201, 203.
Clearing House, old, 179.
Clews (Henry) & Co., Bankers, Mills Bldg, 109.
Clinton (C. W.), Architect, 47, 111,115,215,251.
Clinton Hall, Mercantile Library, 491.
Clubs, T55, 628, 646, 705.
712
A'/iVG'S PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEWS OF NEW YORK.
Coal and Iron Exchange. 237.
" Coal Trade Journal," F. E. Saward, 330, 331.
Coenties Slip, 32.
Coffee Exchange, 49, 51, 568.
Coffee Exchange, The Old, on Beaver St., 41.
Coleman House, 597.
CoUamore (Oilman) & Co., China, etc., 588, 589.
Collegiate Church at 5th Ave. and 48th St., 534.
Collegiate Church at 5th Ave. & 29th St., 587.
Collegiate Church, West End Av. & 77th St., 670.
Colonnade Row, 487.
"Columbia Bicycles," Pope Mfg. Co., 392.
Columbia Restaurant, 509.
Columbia Building, 67, 68.
Columbia Rubber Works, 379.
Columbian Steamship Line, 450, 451.
Commerce Monument, Central Park, 659.
" Commercial Advertiser," Daily, 309, 315.
"Commercial & Financial Chronicle," 150, 151.
" Commercial Bulletin," 38, 39.
Commercial Cable Company, 365, 719.
Commercial Union Assurance Co., 156, 157.
Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, 24, 25.
Coney Island, 720.
Connecticut, Capitol at Hartford, 14.
Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co., 84, 85.
" Connecticut " (Providence Line Steamer), 44S.
Consolidated Stock and Petroleum Ex., 68, 71.
Constable Brothers, Architects, 524.
Constable Building, 188, 529, 568.
Continental Building, 207, 209, 219.
Cooper Union, 493.
Corbin (P. & F.i, Cabinet Hardware, 307.
Corn Exchange Bank, 45, 568.
Cortlandt Street Ferry (Penn. R.R), 234, 235.
Cotton Exchange, 49.
Coudert Brothers, Lawyers, 213.
County Court House, 343, 373.
Court of General Sessions, 343.
Cox (Samuel S.) Statue, 491.
Crane Co., Elevators, Tribune Building, ^33.
Crane & Co., Paper Manufacturers, 130.
Crawford Shoe Store, 177 Broadway, 259, 260.
Crawford Shoe Store, at B'way and 12th St., 508.
Crawford Shoe Store, at B'way and 14th St. 509.
Crawford Shoe Store in Harlem, 680.
Criminal Law Courts, 43-'.
Crosley (Thos. H.) Co., Electrotypers, 430.
Croton Aqueduct Bridge, High Bridge, 681.
Crouch & Fitzgerald, Trunks and Rags, 199.
Cunard Line of Steamships, 19, 21, 63.
Custom House, 99, loi, 125, 127.
Cutler U. S. Mail Chute, 72.
Cutler Manufacturing Company, 72.
Cypress Hills Cemetery Offices, 443.
Dakota Apartment House, 657.
Darmstadt & Scott, Paper, 349.
Dauchy & Co., Advertising Agency, 307.
Davis (John H.) & Co., Bankers, 86, 87,91.
Davis (Samuel D.) & Co., Bankers, 121.
Dean (W. G.) & Son, Mustard, etc., 402, 403.
Decker Brothers, Piano Mfrs., 522, 523.
Decker Building, LTnion Squire, 518, 522, 523.
Delaware & Hudson Canal Co's Building, 237.
Delaware & Hudson Railroad, 236.
Delaware, Lackawana & Western Building, 60.
De Lemos & Cordes, Architects, 171.
De Lima (D. A.) 8i Co., Foreign Merchants, 213.
Delmonico's in Beaver Street, 43, 47.
Demarest (A.) & Son, Engravers, 307.
Democratic Club, 628, 629.
Dennett's Coffee Rooms, Park Row, 309.
Depew (Hon. Chauncey M ), President, 614, 615.
Desbrosses Street Ferry (Penn. K .R.), 235.
Deutsch & Co., Ladies' Garments, 557, 558, 559.
Devoe (F. W.) & C. T. Raynolds Co., Paints,
Varnishes, Brushes, 276, 277.
Dick & Fitzgerald, Publishers, 288, 285.
Diemer (John F.), Document Filing Cases, 430.
Diocesan House, Episcopal, 487.
Dockat Jersey City of Central R.R. of N. J., 231.
Dock at Jersey City of Pennsylvania R.R., 235.
Downing Building, 275.
Down-Town Club, 155.
Drexel Building, Site of, 107.
Drexel Building, 99, 109.
Duane Street, 390, 409, 411, 413.
Duncan (Hanover Bank! Building, 4, 177.
Duncan's (John) Sons, Importers, 300, 301.
Durkee (E. R.) & Co., Condiments, 148, 149.
Dutch Cottage in 1679, 3.
Dutton (E. P.) & Co., Soule's Photo's, 352, 557.
Dwight (John) & Co., Soda Mfrs., 54, 55.
Dyckerhoff Portland Cement, E. Thiele, 42.
Eagle Cage, Central Parle, 642.
Eagle Fire Building, 141.
Eagles, Monument : Central Park, 659.
Earl & Wilson, Collars and Cuffs, 519.
East River, 5, 32, 33, 353, 355, 582.
East River Bridge (see Brooklyn Bridge).
East River National Bank, 479.
Edison Building, 61, 568.
Eidlitz (Charles L.), Electrical Contractor, 528.
Eidlitz (Cyrus L. W.), Architect, 190.
Eidlitz (Marc) & Son, Contractors, 188, 189, 622.
Eighteenth Street East, 527, 529.
Elevated Railroads, 29, 67, 492.
"Electrical Review," 311.
" Electrical World," Postal Teleg. Bldg., 365.
Eighth Street Theatre, 491.
Elevated Railroad, City Hall Branch, 346.
Elizabeth, N. J., 690, 697.
Elliott (James) & Co., Linens, 6.
Ellis Island, Landing for Emigrants and Dining
Hall,Surgeon's Home, Detention Room, 5, 15.
"ElSud," Steamship, Southern Pacific Co. 447.
Emanu-El Temple, Synagogue, 684.
Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, 343.
Episcopal Diocesan House, 487.
Episcopal M issions House, 571.
Episcopal Theological Seminary, 545.
Equitable Life Building, 179, 183, 293, 219.
" Era Druggists' Directory," 274.
" Evenin? Post " Building, 265.
Everett House, B. L. M. Bates, 514, 518, 519.
Evarts (Hon. William M.), Lawyer, 132, 133,137.
Excelsior Power Building, 280, 281.
Excelsior Umbrella Mfg. Co., 429.
Exchange Place, 60, 125.
Exchanges, 35, 49, 51, 63, 71, 89, 95, 97, 225, 707.
Fabric Fire Hose Co., 312, 313, 311.
Fahys Building, 251.
Fahys (Jos.) & Co., Watches and Cases, 250, 251.
Fairchild (Samuel W.), 668, 669.
Falconer, Statue in Central Park, 658.
Fall River Line, 302, 303.
Farlee (J. S.) & Bro., Invest. Bankers, 88, 89.
F'armers' and West Washington Markets, 485.
Farmers' Loan and Trust Co., 46, 47, 60.
Farragut Fire Insurance Co., 420, 421.
Farragut Monument, 679.
Farson, Leach & Co., Bankers, Public Bonds, 80.
Federal Hall, Old City Hall, 105.
Ferries, 29, 133, 230, 231, 234, 235, 685.
Ferris (F. A.) & Co., Packers, 472, 473.
Ferris's Fine Shoes, 22:5.
Fidelity & Casualty Co., 162, 163,. 190, 191, 227.
Fifteenth Street West, 544.
Fifteenth Street East, ';2i.
A'/.vcrs PHoroGRAPi/ic riEifs OF yi-:n' yuKk\
Filth Ave, 483, 529, 530, 534, s^Q, S40, 541, 565, 622.
Fifth Avenue Bank, 626.
Filth Avenue Hotel, Hitchcock, Darling & Co.,
Props., 560, 561, 200, 565, 626, 632, 634.
Fifth Avenue Safe Deposit Co., 200.
First Avenue, 54.
Fischer (H.) & Co. .Coffees, Spices, etc., 404, 405.
Fisk& Hatch, Bankers, 131.
Fisk (Harvey) & Sons, B'k'rs, in. fr'tcnv., 1:51,205.
Fiss & Doerr's Horse Marts at Buffalo, 576.
Fiss & Doerr's Horse Marts at N. York, 576, 577.
Fleischmann's Vienna Bakery, 497.
Flint (Geo. C.) Co., Furniture, 513, 556, 557.
Floyd (John G.), Pub. Banker's Magazine, 290.
Forbes Lithog. M'f'g Co., inside of back cover.
Fort, Old, Central Park, 660.
Forts, II, 13, 660.
Fort Wadsvvorth, 11.
Forty-eighth Street West, 534.
" Forum Magazine," Jackson Building, 518, 510.
Fourteenth St. Bridge, E. River (projected), 5.
Fourteenth Street East, 511, 515; West, 509.
Fourth Avenue, 514, 515, 519, 571.
Fourth Avenue Presbyterian Church, 573.
Fourth National Bank, 175, 205.
Fowler & Wells Co., Phrenologists, 536, 537.
Fo.x (Matthew J.), T;ilor, I93,"i95.
Frank, Kahn & Frank, Shirt Mfrs., 475.
Frink (A.) & Co., Advertising Agency, 197, 229.
Frankfort Street, 339, 342.
Franklin I5ank Note Co., 226.
Franklin Street, 397.
Franklin Typewriter, 410, 411.
Freedman Bros., Cloaks and Suits, 466, 467.
French (H. Q.) Mausoleums and Monum'ts, 678.
French Line Steamships, 24, 25, 63.
French, Schriner & Urner, Shoe Manfrs., igg.
Fulton Street, 263, 265, 269, 273, 275, 277, 68s.
" Furst Bismarck," Hamb'g-American Line, 2j.
Gallatin National Bank, 99, 112. 113, 121.
Gardiner Binding and Mailing Co., 356, 357.
Garner & Co., Dry Goods Commission, 4:8.
Gedney House, 607.
Gelston & Bussing, Bankers, 107.
General Electric Co., Edison Building, 61.
General Theological Seminary, Prot. Epis., 545.
Genesee Fruit Co., Ciders & Beverages, 406,407.
Gerlach Hotel, Chas. A. Gerlach, 598, 599.
German American Bank, Mills Building, 109.
German American Insurance Co., 1S4, 185.
German Savings Institution, 515.
Germania Fire Insurance Co , 210, 211.
Germania Life Insurance Co., 170, 204, 205.
Gerry (Elbridge T. ) Residence of, 646.
Gibson :R. W.), .\rchitect, 34, 51, 91, 118, 201.
Gill Engraving Co., Half-tone Plates, 308.
Goddard (J. W.) & Sons, Tailors' Trimm'gs, 475.
Golding(JohnN.) Real Estate, 4, 171,177,207,221.
Gorham Manuf'gCo., Silversmiths, 530, 531, 535.
Gould's (Jay) Mausoleum, 682.
Gould's (Jay) Res., 5th Ave. and 47th St., 625.
Governor's Island, 5, 13, 63.
Grace Church, Protestant Epis , 477, 497, 503.
Grace Church Rectorv, 407, 40Q.
Grand Central St'n (N.Y. C. & H.R.R.) 615, 617.
Grand Street, 440.
Grand Street Bridge, East River (projected), 5.
Grand LTnion Hotel, Ford & Co., 616, 617.
Grant's Tomb, 674.
Graves (Rob't) & Son, Wall Paper, 622.
Greeley Square, 603.
Greenwich Insurance Co., 198, 199, 255.
Greenwich Street, 4ot, 404, 405.
Greenwood Cemetery Offices, 70.
Guernsey Building, 197.
Haberstroh (L.) & Son, Decor, and Painters, 562.
Hackett, Carhart & Co., Clothiers, 54:;, 375, 377.
Haight (C. C), Architect, 243.
Haight (David L.), Agent, Vanderbilt B'g, 321.
Hale (Nathan) Statue, City Hall Park, 365.
Halleck Statue, Central Park, 661.
Hall (John P.), Electrical Contractor, 570.
Hall & Henshaw, Insurance, 159.
Hall's (Dr. John) Church, Presbyt'n, 632, 633,634,
Hall of Records, 329.
Hamburg-American Steamship Co., 26, 27.
Hamilton Statue, Central Park, 658.
Hannigan & Bouillon, Dry Goods, 440.
Hanover Fire Insurance Co., 168, i6g.
Hanover National Bank, 176, 177.
Hanover Square, 51, 59.
Hanover Street, 59.
Harding (Geo. Ed.) & Go<.ch, Arch'ts, 365, 587.
Harlem River, 674, 6-6, 677.
Harris (N. W.) & Qo., Bankers, 92, 93, 95.
Hartford, C, 705.
I'nion Mutual Life Insurance Co., 159.
Union Pacific Tea Co., 57.
I'nion Square, 514, 515, 51S, 510.
Union S(}uare Hotel, J. H. Fife, Man'r, 514, 515.
Union S(|uare West, 520, 521, 522, 523.
Union Trust Company, 68, 74, 75, S5.
United l')ank Building, 83.
United Charities 15uiiding, 571, 572.
Ihiited Slates Branch Bank Corner Stone, 134.
United States Check Punch Company, 396.
United Slates Hotel in Boston, 104, 476.
United States Life Ins. Co., 131, 331, 345, 3'
S^V. :^72i 377- . . ,
United States Mutual Accident Association, 41,.
I'nited Slates National Bank, 115, 117, 119.
United States Trust Co., 117, iiS, 119.
Unloading Bananas from Fruit Vessels, 6S5.
Upham (H. H.) & Co., Painters, 456, 457.
■Vanderbilt Building, 3211, 321.
Vanderbilt (Cornelius), Residence of, 639, 63S.
X'anderbilt Mansions, 632, 6?^.
Vanderbilt (Mrs. William H.), Residence of, 633.
\'anderbilt (William K.), Residence of, 633, 634.
Vanderlip (Perry), Show Cards, 311.
Van 1 louten (C. J.) & Zoon, Cocoa, 385, 386, 387.
Van Houten's Cocoa, 311, 313, 385, 380, 387.
Varick Street, 397.
Verniilye & Co., Bankers, 174, 175.
Victoria Hotel, 585.
Von (iraef Medical Co., 313.
7i8 KING'S PHOTOGRAPH C VIEIVS OF NEW YORK.
WALL STREET. Warren-Scharff Asphalt Paving Co., 700-707.
No. on St. Pages in Book Warren Street, 345, 366, 369.
I. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. C0..S4, 85 War Vessels, U. S. Navy, 11.
1. William Wilson 85 Washington Arch. Washington Square, 483.
2. Parson, Leach & Co 80 Washington Bridge, 676.
2. United Bank Building 83 Washington Building, 64, 65.
2. National Bank of the Republic 82, 83 Washington Building, Views from. 67.
2. First National Rank 83 Washington Centennial Exercises in 1889, 103.
10. Astor Building 87, 91 Washington Life Insurance Co., 102, 237,
10. John H. Davis & Co 86 Washington Memorial Arch, 483.
10. George R. Read 91 Washington Monument, 514.
11. Mortimer Building 89, 93 Washington Street, 395, 397, 402, 403.
II. J. S. Farlee & Bro 88 Washington Square, 483.
13. Stock E.xchange 93 Washington Statue, 93, loi.
15. N. W. Harris & Co 92 Washington Trust Co. , 380, 381.
15. Wilks Building 93, 95 Waterman (L. E.) Co., Waterman's Pens, 76, 255,
18. Continental Trust Co 91 Water Street, 57, 142, 149.
18. Robert W. Gibson 91 Waters ( W.') & Son, Bookbinders, 277.
20. Manhattan Trust Company. .90, 91, 103 Watts (\Vm.), Carpenter, 507.
24. Federal Hall in 1789 105 Webster Statue Central Paik, 661.
24. Sub-Treasury 99, 103 Welles Building, 18 Broadway, 70.
24. Washington Centennial Exercises. 103 Wellington Hotel, G. Murray, Prop., 612, 613.
24. Washington Statue 93, 99, loi, 103 West Broadway, 385, 389, 393.
25. Drexel Building Site 107 West Street, 230, 407.
29. Leather Manufacturers' Bank. .107, in Westchester Fire Insurance Co., 133.
32. Assay Office 99 Westermann (B.)& Co., Books, etc., 498,504,505.
33. Mechanics Nat. Bank.. 107, no, in, 119 Western Electric Building, 189.
34. Gallatin National Bank .99, 112, 113, 121 Western LTnion Telegraph Building, 261, 293.
35. Mills Building on Wall Street ..in, 115 Westminster Hotel, E. N. Anable, Prop., 516,517
37. Metropolitan Trust Co 114,115, 117 West Shore Railroad, 488.
38. Thompson Building 121 West Shore Stores, Term. Warehouse Co., 546.
40. Manhattan Co. Bank 121, 131 West Washington Market, 485.
41. LTnited States Nat. Bank... 117, 115, 119 "Where to Stop," Hotel Guide, 108, 220, 684.
41. Redmond, Kerr & Co 117 White Squadron, U. S. War Vessels, n.
42. Merchants Nat. Bank. .120, 121, 131, 132 White (Loomis L.) & Co., Bankers, 83.
44. Bank of America. .121, 122, 123, 131, 132 White & Major, Umbrellas, 520, 521.
46. New York Security and Trust Co. . 123 Whitney (William C), Residence of, 638.
47. United States Trust Co 118. 119 Whittakcr (Thos.), Pub. and Bookseller, 494,495
48. Bank of New York 129, 131, 132 Whittier Machine Co., Elevators, 594.
49. Phenix National Bank 117, iiS, 119 Wilde's (Samuel) Sons, Cofifee, 50.
49. Atlantic Mutual ins. Co 117,119, 127 Wilks Building, 93, 95. .
50. Royal Insurance Co.. ..128, 129, 131, 132 Williamsburgh City Fire Ins. Co., 228, 229.
50. Hartford Fire Insurance Co 708 William Street, 43, 47, 49, 60, 346.
52. N. Y. Life Ins. & T. C0.132, 133, 134, 135 Wilson (William), Druggist, 85.
52. Evarts, Choate & Beaman..i37, 132, 133 Windsor Castle, 624.
52. National City Bank.131, 132, 133, 136, 137 Windsor Hotel, Hawk &Wetherbee, 624, 625, 626.
52. Ger. American Invest. Co.. 132, 133, 137 Winser & Dormitzer, Labels and Bcxes, 321.
54. Central Trust Co 133, 139 Winslow's (Mrs.) Soothing Syrup, 474.
54. Carter, Hawley & Co uS Wirz (Oswald), Architect, 155.
55. Custom House 09, 127 Wood & Selick-, Confectioners' Supplies, 389.
58. Rutgers Fire Insurance Co 133, 434 Woodlawn Cemetery, 678, 679.
59. Brown Brothers & Co loi Woodworth (C. A.) & Co., Mirrors, 551.
81. Eagle Fire Company 141 Wool Exchange, 707.
87. Steinwender, Stoffregen cS: Co.. 140, 141 "World," 319, 328, 339, 341, 354. 361.
105. Hard & Rand ' 143 "World" Tower Views, ^42, 343, 344, 345,346, 347.
113. James E. Ward & Co 143 Worthington (Henry R.), Pumps, 690, 691.
115. Dan Talmage's Sons 143, 145 Worthington, Smith & Co , IVlillinery, 519.
117. American Sugar Refining Co 145 Worth Monument, Madison Square, 565.
Worth Street, 386, 393, 435.
"Wabash Railway, 9th National B'k Bldg, 427.
Wade (H. D.) & Co., Printing Inks, 656. Yergason (E. S.), Furnishings, dor, 644, 645.
Waldorf Hotel, George C. Boldt, Prop., 595. Yonkers, Otis Elevator Works, 687.
Wallace Building, 155, 568. Yorston Brothers, Art Publishers, 520.
Wallace (R.) & Sons Mfg. Co., Sil'smiths, 584, 585 Young Men's Christian Association, 573.
Wall Street Ferry, 133. Young Women's Christian Association, 525.
Wall Street, old, 107. Younker (L. M.), Son & Co., Pants Mfrs., 475.
Warren Chemical & MfgCo., Roofing & Paving,
General Offices, 279 ; Works at Long Island 25immerman & Forshay, Money Brokers, 89.
City, 278 ; also pp. 332, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, Zion and St. Timothy Church, Prot. Epis., 635.
705, 706, 707. Zucker (Alfred), Architect, 481, 567, 6-ti.
PUBLISHER'S NOTE.— This book was printed and bound by the American Bank Note Co.
The engravings were madechiefly by the Matthews-Northrup Co. of Buffalo, and the F. A. Ringler
Co. of New York. The Photographs were made chiefly by A. Chiar, Charles Mills, the lUustratea
American, Frank E. Parshley and J. S. Johnston. MOSES KING, Publisher, BOSTON, Mass.
THREE
DUPLEXED
CABLES.
Independent
Progressive.
SHORTEST,
SWIFTEST.
SAFEST
ROUTES.
BLEGRAM.
yy^i^^ / yrfS'
J. W. MACKAY,
PRESIDENT,
GEO. G. WARD,
VICE-PRES'T AND
GE N' L M' G* R.
CONEY ISLAND, NEW YORK'S HOLIDAY RESORT.
BIRD'S-EYE VIEW. THE BEACH. THE STATION. THE IRON PIER.
Forbes
, BOOK
/aOJTJ^4TJ0JV/
THE FORBES COMPANY.
NEW YORK ( Mutual Reserve Building, 305 Broadway, cor. Duane St.
NEW YORK LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY.
John A.. PvIcCaLtL, F*resident.
COMMISSIONERS' CERTIFICATE.
New YORK CITY, November 28, 1894.
We, the Insurance Commissioners and Superintendents of the States ot Massachusetts, Illinois,
Kansas, Keniucl(y, Missouri, Ohio and Texas, pursuant to the invitation ol the President of the Company,
dated June 1, 1894, do hereby certify that we have been for the past four months engaged in a thorough
and searching official investigation into the affairs of the New York Life Insurance Company of the City
of New York.
We further certify that each Stock and Bond owned, each Collateral Loan, each Bond and Mort-
gage Loan made, the Cash and each Bank Certificate ot Deposit, was carefully examined, checked and
veriHed ; that the Pulley Loans and Premium Notes were examined and checked with the Reserve on
each Policy ; that Interest and Rents due and accrued, unreported and Deferred Premiums, were also verified ;
that the values of Stocks and Bonds owned, and Real Estate owned, were individually and closely
scrutinized and conservatively made; that the title to each piece of property secured, and Bond and
Mortgage Loan made since the 1891 New York State Insurance Department Investigation, was examined
and found satisfactory. That the Policy Reserve was checked and verified by the Actuaries of our
several State Insurance Departments, and that every Policy and its Reserve, on the books of the Com-
pany, was checked individually with the Valuation Policy Registers of the Massachusetts Department;
that all Sundry Liabilities were also verified; that each debit and credit entry in the Company's books
was checked from the date of the said New York State Investigation; and that as a result, on the
most conservative basis of valuation, we found the Company possessed of ASSISXS satisfactory
to «.. amounting to $155,453,438.73
And that, after providing for all possible Liabilities, including $135,058,291.00 for outstanding
Policy Reserve, as per the "Combined Experience Table of Mortality," with four per cent, interest, the
total of the same amounted to $138,124,363.81.
We further certify that, by the severest test, the BiHX SVR PIPITS to policy-holders.
after providing for every liability, and deducting Agents' Balances, was, on June 30, 1894,
$17,3S9,OG4.93
^n SUitttesd lUHcrfOf, we have hereunto subscribed our respective names, In
the City ol New York, the day and year above wrilten.
M(-2 74.
ssloner, State of Massachuse*
tepJ€nt of Insurance, State of Illinois. Supenntofflcnt of Insurance, State of Kansas.
ComMssioner of Insurance, State of Kentucky. ^-"
Superintendent of Insurance, State of Ohio, y^ Insurance Commission'
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