. /' ■^'. " n \^^' "^^^ '*7^^'^'\:^^'• ^/<^^ A' ^./^ .\^ [^^ ^^>'C/% /"/>^v.> >-^^-^^^' mm — T ^^^^. l...(„lll — I — st Indies, Great Britain.Ireland and Iceland : I together witli the southern part of Greenland, the northern part of I South y\merica, and the western pnrts of Europe and Africa. II. There will he. an Eclipse of the Sun ou the 20th of Octoher, nt j the time of New Moon in the morning, invisible in America, but visi- j bie through the oro;9 M. Full Moon, l-2th 9 6 M. THE MOOK. dav. It. inin. TJiiid auaiter, 20th 10 56 M. New Moon, 27th 4 27 M. ([ Apogee, 13tli. Perioree, 26th. of Day of Week. Moil I IJTIiuis-day 2|Friday SSaluiday 4SUi\DAY SMonday eJTuesday 7| Wednesday 8lTliursday 91 Friday lOSatiirdav 11 SUNDAY 12 Monday 1:j Tuesday 1-1 Wednesday ISThuisday IG Friday 17 Saturday 18SUNDAY 19 .Monday 20Tticsday 2lVV(!dne.sday 22Thiirsday 2Li Friday 24 Saturday 25 SUNDAY 26 .Monday 27 Tiie.-day 2f< Wednesday 29 Thursday 30: Friday 31 'Saturday MISCKLLANEOtrS. Circumcision. II soutli 7 8. 7 ©'s sou. 8 45. 2d S. aft Christmas. Sirius south 11 37. Epipliany. ([ U- V stationary. x\. O. battle, 1815. d runs liigh. 4 soutii 6 38. let S. aft. Epip. Aldebaran s. 8 58. d in apogee. Lll-&i-yard s. 9 52. Sirius south 10 54. Frankiin horn 1706. ^ 's gr elongation. Rigel s. 9 11. enters ^. Fabian d 0.- Agnes. Vincent. D © 4- Ell-&-yard s. 9 IG. d runs low. (.Vmv.of St. Paul, d in per. 9 at great- [est brilliancy. S(i9. [1649. Charles I. beheaded Sirius south 9 55. 7 27 4 41 7 27 4 42 7 27 4 43 7 2714 44 7 27J4 4 7 27 4 46 7 27 4 47 7 27 4 48 7 26 4 49 7 26 4 50 7 2ti:4 5] 7 26'4 52 7 25 4 53 7 2514 54 7 25 4 55 7 24 4 56 7 24 4 5 7 23 4 59 7 23 5 7 22 5 1 7 21 7 21 7 20 7 19 7 V.) 7 1.-^ 5 8 7 11 5 10 7 J6 5 II 7 15 5 1 7 14 5 13 7 14 5 15 Suii'» dec. Moon South. sets. o ' h. m. 23 9 37 22 55 10 46 22 49 1152 22 43 mor. 22 36 57 22 29 1 .59j 22 22 2 59 22 14 3 56 22 5 4 49 21 .57 5 38 2147 6 22 2138 rises. 2128 6 21! 21 17 7 18 21 6 8 15 20 55 9 13 20 43 10 11 20 31 11 11 20 li' mor. i 20 42 19 52 1 16 19 39 2 20 19 25 3 25 19 10 4 27 18 r,(i 5 25 18 41 6 17 18 25 set.^s. 18 9 7 12 17 53 8 25' 17 37 9 36i 17 20 10 43| U Water l-la-l K. Y. S. j h. m. 5€ ill 38 3€ mor. T 26 ciL 1 13 2 2 56 4 4 5 15 6 32 7 30 8 17 8 58 .. 9 34 £1 10 9 a 1 10 40 TTG 11 12 nii!ll44 :^ 50 m 1 30 m 1 2 17 ni i 3 17 ^ 4 36 ^ ! 5 56 Y? 7 10 Y3 8 7 ^8 58 ^r 9 48 ^ 10 35 3^111 19 T mor. 10 MEMORANDA FOR JANUARY. G^M n /lORANDA FOR JANUARY. 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 i S^l^^S 1 MEMORANDA FOR JANUARY. . | 1 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 1^".'\ FT^nrvlTARY, 2rt Month. bPsiins on Sunday. 9 SLEIOHINO. PHASES OF THE 3I00X. day. hr. min. day. br. mm. First Quarter, 3cl 15 M. I Third Quarter, 18th 11 48 A. Full Moon, 11th 4 16 M. New Moon 25th 2 36 A. ([ Apogee, 9th. Perigee, 24ih. Day of Mon 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 10 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Day of Week. SUADAY Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday " Friday Saturday SUNDAY Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday SUNDAY Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday ♦SUNDAY Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday MISCELLANEOUS. 4th S. aft. Epiphany. Purif.ofB.V.M.([U- Sirius south 9 43. d runs high. Procyon sou. 10 24. 9 stationary. Septuagesinia. d in apogee. Clinton died, 1828. Sirius soulli 9 7. Schwartz died, 1798, Valentine. Sexagesima. Regulus south 17. an. enters 5€. Sirius south 8 40. ([ runs Jow. Quinqua. St. Matthias. ([in per. Ash Wednesday. Procyon south 9 5. Sirius south 9 5. h. m. h. m.l o ' 7 13 5 16 17 3 7 12 5 17 16 46 7 115 18 16 29 7 10 5 2016 11 7 9|5 2115 53 7 7,5 22 15 34 7 6 5 23 15 15 7 5 5 2414 57 7 4 5 2614 37 7 3 5 27 14 18 7 25 2813.58 7 5 291338 6 595 3l!l3 18 6 58 5 32 12 58 6 56 5 33 12 37 6.555.341217111 6 6.545351156 nior. 6 52 5 37 11 351 9 6 515.3811 13 1 11 11 4t nior 50 149 2 44 3 34 4 20 5 1 5 38 6 11 rises. 7 7 6.50,5 3910.12 2 12J i 6 48 5 40 10 30 6 47 5 41 10 8 6 45 5 43 9 46 6 44 5 44 6 42,5 45 6 4l'5 4(> 6 39 .5 47 6 38j5 48 924 9 2 8 40 8 17 3 10 4 3 4 51 5 34 sets. 7 10 8 21 9 30 High Water, N. Y. h. ni. 3 45 129 2 15 3 12 4 30 5 52 7 6 8 8 40 9 17 9 48 10 19 10 48 11 19 1151 ev.24 1 1 146 2 42 4 3 5 32 6 54 7 55 8 44 9 30 10 15 10 .57 * George Washington, born Feb. 22d, 1732 ; inaugurated, in ih(! city of New- York, first President of the United States, April 30th, 1789; died, Dec. 14th, 1799. 1 vr^j«w 4« ^ MEMORANDA FOR FEBRUARY. 1 2 3 4 1 5 6 7 8 y llO MEMORANDA FOR FEBRUARY. 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 j MEMORANDA FOR FEBRUARY. I 20 21 22 23 24 2S 1840. MAliUIi, 3d MonU , begins on Sunday. 1 3 ~ ' .. _i ■■■■i^i^Mi ill 1 — ;=^^^= ^^•=^=^s= •=^^f^SBKBmSBS^ ^M W^- ^m ^jWMfe^g'-" -J. "fft^.:-^ "v;_ - 1 - -^ MARINK STORM. 1 PHASES OF THK MOON. d^v. lir. iniii.- dav. lir. min. Fir«t (iuaiter, 4lh 5 3i> A. Tiiird Quarter, 2Uth 9 2 M. Full Moon, 12tli 9 .53 A. N ew Moon, 27th 55 M. ([ Aposee, 8th. Perijret-, ^J4Ui. "of Mon No. Day of Week. MISCELLAXEOUS. SUN ^^- 1 Mno„ , ft "'?iL Ris. & sets, g-^--^ 1 sea. | ^^ ^^^^'^y'; .Nam.;. h. in. h. m., o ' 1 h. in. ^ S. h. m. 1 SUNDAY Ist Sunday in Lent. 6 36 5 50 7 3210 35, « 1138 2 Monday Inferior 5*© 9 . 6 35 5 51 7 9 11 371 « nior. 3 Tuesdiiy Procyon soutli 8 45. (5 33 5 52 6 46 mor. 1 H 16 4 Wednesday 6 32 5 53 6 23! 35 n 55 5 Thursday Sap. $(D^ . dr. hi^h. 6 30 5.54 6 1 28 n 140 6 Friday Princeton College 6 29 5 55 5 37 2 16 S 2 31 7 Saturday [burnt, 1802. 6 27 5.56 5 13 2.59 ^ 3 44 8 SUND.iY d in apn;rr(;. 6 25 5 57 4 50 3.37 S 5 9 9 Mon()av Spican]^.south2]l. 6 24 5 58 4 27 4 12 a 6 28 10 Tuesdiiv Rtgulus south 10 46. 6 226 4 3 4 43 Si 7 30 li Wrdna^day 6 206 1 3 40 5i3iro 8 10 12 Thursday Martyr Gregory. 6 196 2 3 16rises.'lTJ2 8 49 13 Friday y discover, d, 1781. 6 17 6 3 2 52, 6 57 m 9 20 14 Snlwrdav Spica nil south 15]. 6 166 4 2 29 7 58 r£^ 9 5] 15 !■;. ([ in i)er. 5 10 42' 11 33 2 5^3 37 2] Tuesday Spica IIB south 11 18. 5 14 4411154 2 4li3€ ! 4.59 22 Wednesday Antares south 2 20. 5 13 451 12 14 3 10; 3€ ; 6 14 2:t Thursday St. G.;orge. 5 12 40 12 34 3 50 T 7 13 24 Friday Rrazil discov. 1500. 5 10 47|12 54 4 25 T 8 4 25 Saturday St. Mai k. a U- 5 9 48 13 13 sets. « 8 48 20 SUNDAY 2d Sunday all. Eastei 5 7,0 49 13 33 8 5 X 9 30 O' Monday 5 6 50 13 52 9 4 n 10 9 28 Tuesday Monroe born, 1758. 5 5 51 14 11 9 58 n 10 48 29 Wednesday d runs high. 5 3:6 52 14 30 10 47 nil 20 30 Thursday Spina IfUsdUth 10 42. 5 2 6 .->:, 14 84 11 30 °^ mor. MEMORANDA FOR APRIL. 10 ^ ^ MEMORANDA FOR APRIL. ^ 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 MEMORANDA FOR APRIL. 21 22 23 24 25 26 28 29 30 ' 1H40. MAY. 5tli Month, iHLnns on Fridriv. 21 jj Mi--« 1 1 iiiiimih -1 .,- „--*s- FS'ff ':«TTr»WBl ^^^ }. •-■' • ., .■ V -"^ ^J^^^^^ ^^^^^^fi' r-^^uT^^^^^^-—^*^*^^^^ — «-^-v P.iJlr^- ' -^rfS^S^iS^^^T'^ THE DELIGHTS OF MAY-DAY. PHASES OF THE MOOX. dd\. Lir. lii.ri. day. hr. nun. First auarter, 3(1 6 5() M. Third Quarter, 17ih 8 31 A. Full Moon, lltli 1 10 M. New Moon, 24th 11 48 A. d Apoiree. 3d. Ppiiffee, 1.5th. i "r Day of Week. MISCF.I.I.ANEOUS. SUN Ris. ic Sets. dec. iT'd '^-r. JMon: North. S'^'^- 1 Pla. N. Y. 1 Mo.l Kame. h. m. h. m. ' h. m. 1 6. h.m. 1 I'Friday Sts. Philip &. James. 5 1 6 54 15 6 inor. fjD 4 1 2 Saturday [ 5 stationary. 4 59 6 55 15 24 8a 43 1 SSUNDAY d in ai)ogec. 4 58 6 56 15 42 42' SI 129 i 4 Monday Spica llj south 10 27. 4 57 6 57|16 1 13 SI 220 1 STupsday .Napoleon died, 1821. 4 56 6 .58116 17 143 TTE 3 29 6, Wednesday 4 55 6 59 16 34 2 1-2, m 4 41 7iThursday Arcturus south 11 6. 4 53 7 016 50 2 40 :0= 5 48 8 Friday 9 rises 3 1. 4 52 7 117 7 311 =0= 6 45 9 Saturday Spica TTG south 10 7. 4 51 7 217 23 3 44 -:^ 7 30 10 SUN DAY 4th Sund. aft. Easter. 4.50 7 317 39 4 21 lU 8 9 11 Monday 9 's gr elongation. 4 49 7 417 54 rises.! Ill 8 50 12,Tue3day [low. 4 48 7 5I18 10 8 50' i 9 29 j Is'Wednesday A.T. S. ann. d runs 4 47 7 6|l8 24 947: S 10 6 1 14 Thursday A.B.S. ann. 2 © 4. 4 46 7 7 18 39 10 39 y5 10 48 1 15 Friday d in perigee. 4 45 7 818 53 11 25j V3 1130 16 Saturday 5 's v*, JCi^^ ->^ MEMORAN HA R MAY 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 1846. JUNE, 6th Month, begins on Monday. 25 i i^^^S i^-'.:-^-i';^'S-EOUS. Sets. /T "'eh U Water, - - Y_ No. I Name. 1 Wednesday STIiursday 3Fridiy 4Snliirdnv 5.SU-\DAY 6 Monday 7 Tuesday 8 Wednesday QTliursday 10 Friday 11 Saturday 12 SUN DAY 13 Monday 14 Tuesday ]5U'edne.-day 16 Thursday 17 Friday 18 Saturday 19 SUNDAY 20 Monday 21 Tuesday 22:Wedn(!sday 23 Thursday 24 Friday 25'Saturdav 26'SUNDAY 271 Monday 2.«Tue^d•.■v 29 Wednesday 30 Thursday 31 Friday Wyoniingr mas. 1778. Visitation B. V. M. cn. Independence. 4lh Sunday al't.Trin. □ G5 I; J. d runs low. Ld. Burke died, 1797. ([ in perigee. Columbus l)orn, 1447, J. Q. Adams b. 1707. jth Sunday aft. Trin. Fren. Rev.com. 1789 Geo. Clinton h. 1739. |E. Gerry born, 1739. jVejia south 10 46. ({ runs hif!;!!. ;I;,I stationary. |R. Burns d. 1796. j ^ south 2 10. enters 9. . S. Bdlivar born, 1783 St. James, d in ap. 7th Sunday aH. Trin. Altairsouth 11 21. S 's <:r eionfration. Ve(ra south 10 2. jWm. Penn d. 1718. h>soutli 1 33. h. m. h. : 4 34:7 4 3.1 1 7 4 3.-)i7 4 3617 4 36,7 4 37 7 4 .37 1 7 4 38|7 4 39|7 4 3917 4 40|7 4 417 4 41 7 4 42 7 4 43 7 4 44:7 4 44|7 4 4.-V7 4 46 7 4 47 7 4 4^ 7 4 4!.|7 4 49 7 3323 7 32 23 3 32 22 59 h. m. I 11 40i mor. I 12! 48j 129 2 18 3 14 rises. 1 7 59 8 42i 9 20 4 50 : 4 51''; 4 52 1 4 53 ' 4 .54 •; 4 55 - 4 56,' 4 57"; 32 22 48 32 22 42 3 i 22 36 31 22 29 31 22 22 30 22 15 3022 7 29 21 59 9 5f 29 21 50 10 30 2r21)2ll 5, 2.-^ 21 32 1 1 41, 27|21 23 mor. 27 21 131 19! 26 21 2| 1 25 20 51, 1 44 25 20 (0 2 33 24 20 29 3 25 23 20 17J 4 19, 22 20 5'sets. } 21 19 53| 7 49 21 19 40' 8 18 2(tll9 27' 8 46 19 19 13 9 14 1^ 18 .59 9 43 17 18 45 10 13 16,18 31 10 47 1.518 J6 11 24 h. m. 1 11 1 55 2 45 3 49 4 54 6 7 3 7 57 8 47 9 38 10 28 11 13 ^ ley. 1 50 137 2 32 3 32 4 45 5 55 7 4 7 56 8 40 9 19 9 55 10 29 10 59 ,11 31 imor. 4 =^i 37 1 16 ifl MEMORANDA FOR JULY. 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 MEMORANDA POR JULY. 20 21 MFMORANDA FOR JULY. X 22 23 1 24 1 25 I 26 j 27 28 29 30 |3l 1 1846. AUGT'ST, 8th Mnntli, bfgins on Satuiday. 33 PIC- NIC. I PHASES OF THE MOON dav. lir. min. dr\y. lir. niiii. Full Moon, 7th 1 4 M. I New Moon, 21st (J 29 A. Tliiid auarter. l.ltli 5 55 A. First auaiier, 2'Jth 5 23 A. d Perigee, 7tli. Apogee, 00. MISCELLANEOUS. No.: >ame. 1 S;itiiidiiv B'tie of the Nile. 1798, 2 SU.ND.-iY 8th Sunday aft. Tiin. 3 Monday ({ runs low. 4 Tuesday > south 1 IG. 5 VVednesdavi CTiuirsday Tran.«figuralion. 7 P'riday ([ in perigee. 8 Saturday > S(uitii .W. 9 SUNDAY 9lh Sunday aft. Trin. 10 M(Hiday St. LHwreiice. llTues south 17. 19 Wednesday Aitair south 9 51. 4 5(?| I 4 59:7 7 07 l!7 2'7 3,7 4'7 20 Thursday 21 Friday 22 Sa turd My 2:1 SUNDAY 24 Monday 2.') Tuesday |Wm. IV. born, 17 1 © enters ITB. ;St. narilioloniew. jli.f-rior i©8. 2(i Wednesday d Q. 271'luuxlay Dr. Heipch. d. 1822. 28 Kriday ISt. Angutjiine. 29 Saturday jSt. J. Hap. beheaded. 30;SUNDAY C runs low. 3l;Mondav lllunyan d. 1688. )6 5 10 6 5 116 5 12 6 ) 13 () ) 14 (•> 5 lot; ) If) 6 5 17 6 18 6 19 () 20 ti 5 21 6 5 22 6 5 23 5 21ti 5 25 6 5 2() (5 5 27 6 14 18 1 nior. ! 13 17 46i 8! 12 17 31 59] 10 17 1.5 1 57 9 16 50; 3 3! 8 16 42; 4 14 7 16 25 rises. 6 16 9, 7 52 4 15 51: 8 29 3 15 34 9 51 215 16 9 4ll 1 14 .58 10 19| 59 14 40 11 58 14 221144 57 14 3mor. t ,55 13 44 31 54 13 25 1 22 52 13 6j 2 15' 51 12 46; 3 9 .50 12 26: 4 51 48 12 7 sets. ; 47 11 46( 6 51 45 11 26l 7 19 44 11 6 42 10 45 4110 24 39 10 3 7 47 8 J7 8 49 9 24 38 9 42 10 4 36 9 2lil0 5L .34 8 59 1144 33 8 .3<^ luor. ! Hich ■Water, X. Y . , h. m. I 2 1 2 57 4 10 \ 5 26 6 41 7 41 8 34 9 23 10 10 10 54 1140 ev.23 1 10 1 58 2 56 4 10 5 28 6 43 7 38 8 22 8 59 9 33 10 3 10 33 11 3 11 .35 nior. 7 43 126 2 21 10 MEMORANDA FOR AUGUST. w ^^m^^m^^,^. X 11 MEMORANDA FOR AUGUST. 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 *=« - i^l fj^ 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 MEMORANDA FOR AUGUST. 31 1 ]:3}r,. SEPTEMBER. Oth Monih, h-ainsnnTiu-dnv. 3T! M^^M: iwi^^^HH^H^^^^^^)^^^^£%A 1 ^K^^^^B^^K^^^^^^S^^K^^^tsJ^^ ^^^^^^^^^K'l 1 SHOOTING. PHASES OF THE MOON. day. br. min. day. Iir. mm. i Full Moon, 5th 8 'JO M. I New Moon, 20th 10 38 M. 1 Tiiird aiinrter, liJtIi 6 46 M. | First Uiiarter. 28th 2 31 M. d Perigee, 4lh. Apogee, iVili. Day of Day of Week. MISCELLANEOUS. SU.V 1 S""'^ ' Moon K;..6cSet.\%\-^l Sets. d Pla. Water N. Y. No.l xNarae. i h m ih m o ' 1 li m ~ h. m. 1 Tuesday [> south 11 14. 5 28 '] 31 8 16 44 V3 3 33 2 Weilnesdiiy London b. 1666, 0. S. 5 29 1)30 7 54 151- Y5 5 3 Thursday a stationary. 5 30 6 28, 7 32 3 2 ^ 6 22 4 Friday din perigee. 5 31 6 26 7 10] 4 16 .::;:;• 7 24 SSnturday 5 32 6 25 6 48 rises. ^ 8 18 6SUNDAY La Fayette brn, 1757. 5 33 6 23 6 25 6 59 ^ 9 4 7 Monday H.Moro died. 1833. 5 34 6 21 6 3 7 36 T 9 48 8 Tuesday Nat. ofB. V. Mary. 5 35 6 20 5 41 8 15 T 10 34 9 Wt^dnesday [dU. D®4- 5 36 6 18, 5 18 8 56 « 11 15 10 Thursday 505 5 37 6 171 4.55 9 40 « 1157 11 Frid:iy 5 's gr elongation. 5 38 6 151 4 32 10 27 n ev.39 12 Saturday druns high. 5 39 6 13 4 9 11 17 n 125 13SIFNDAY 14th Sunday af. Trin. 5 39 6 12 3 46 inor. 2 20 14Mondiy Moscow burnt, 1812. 5 40,6 10 3 23 10 ^ 3 31 LiTu.'sday Sur. of N. Y. 1776. 5 416 8 3 1 4 c^ 4 54 16 VVedn(!sday 5 42 6 7 2 37 159 £1 6 10 17 Thursday d in apogee. 5 43 6 5 2 14 2.55 a 7 13 18 Friday Fomilhautsou. 10 58. 5 44 6 3 151 3 51 m 7 55 lOSiturilay ^ south 9 .">S. 5 45,6 1 127 4 48 m 8 32 21) SUNDAY 15th Sunday af. Trin. 5 46 6 1 4 sets. nj 9 4 21 Monday St. Matthew. 5 47 5 .58 41 6 20 9 35 22 Tuesday da- 5 48 5 .56 N. 17 6 52 .j^ 10 4 23 Wednesday enters rC^. Major 5 49 5 55 S. 6 7 26 m 10 35 24 Thursday [Andre taken. 1780. 5 59 5 53 30 8 5 m 11 7 2.5 Friday Fotnal. south 10 31. 5 51;5 51 0.53 8 49 t 11 41 26Siturday > south 9 29. 5 .52 5 .50 1 K 9 38 t inor. 27 SUNDAY 16th Sunrlay af. Trin. 5 .53 5 48 140 10 34 t 19 2S Monday Detroit retaken, 1813. 5 54 5 46 2 3 1137 V3 1 3 29Tue-'day St. Michael. 5 .55 5 45 2 27 juor. V3 159 30 Wednesday St Jerome. 5 56 5 43 2 50 44 3 14 MEMORANDA FOR SEPTEMBER. 10 12 13 14 15 16 17 \S 19 20 22 23 ii 24 2o 26 27 28 29 30 1846. OCTOBER, 10th Month, begins on Thursday. 41 | *ij-«-* ' -^^-=- - ---^^ — -s^-i ij s^^^^'^->^ ^^' M 1^^^^ -. // / w ^ .^ *-' ■"«->Ir~-«5^^'^^^==i=^- - -<=i^«*«£*^^^^^^S^V" GATHERING APPLES. ; I'HASF.S Oh- TrfE 3IOOX. jl 1 d\v. Lr. mr.i. d:i3'. lir. min. ^ i i Full Moon. 4th 5 10 A. New Moon, 20th 2 48 M. j 1 Third Unarter, llth 11 12 A. Fiist Onarter, 27th 10 14 M. ^1 p.-.i.-i-.^ :i,(i. ,x\u.ui'i\ ir.ih 1 r( 1 Day Of Week. .MiSCKLLANKOUS. l^^s.^LtJ H.] «^- ^^^ Water, 11 N.Y. 1 No. Nam.. ,h. m. h.fra. o ' h. m. S. h.m. 1 Thursday '? south 9 9. 15 5e:5 41 3 13| 1 54^ 4 42 2 Friday Andre executed, 1780. 5 .5y[5 40 3 37 3 6 5€ 6 4 3 Situidav d in perigee. 6 0|5 38 4 4 18 5^ 7 5 4'SIJ.\DAY [7ih Sunday af. Trin. G 1'5 30 4 23 rises. T 7 56 S^Mondav If. stationary. dU.G 2 5 35 4 4G; 6 7T 8 42 Gi'J'iiHt^day [8 0y.6 3,5 33 5 9 6 48 b 9 2G 7 j Wednesday i^uperior ^ © 5 . :G 4 5 31 5 32 7 31 « 10 10 j 8,Tliursday .1. Hancock d. 1793. [0 5,5 30 5 55 8 19 n 10 51 9 Friday drunshijih. j6 6 5 28 6 IH 9 9 11 11 31 lOSitiirdav Xsouth8 32. 6 7J5 27 6 4110 2 Zi ev.l2 llSUiNDAY •;eo. 11. and Williel.6 8l5 25 7 4 10.56^ 57 12 Mnn.l .y [niina crowned, 1728. 6 915 23 7 2GJ152ZZ 149 1 13 Tuesday Broclc killed, 1812. 6 10i5 22 7 49 nior. SI 2 51 i 14 Wednesday, l^south 11 12. 6 ll!5 20 8 11 47 a 4 12 15Thnr.sday 1(1 in apo^ne. 6 1215 19 8 33 1 43 PB 5 .30 16 Friday re.s soutli 2 1. 6 135 17 8 56 2 40 IIJ 6 35 nSaturdav Burgoyne sur. 1777. 6 155 16 9 181 3 36niJ 7 21 18SUND.\Y ^t. Luke. 6 16;5 14 9 40 4 34 ri:^ 7 57 19 Monday ('ornw. sur. 1781. 6 17J5 13 10 1 5 32^:^ 8 31 20 Tuesday an. 6 1-^5 11 10 23 sets, til 9 21 21 VVi-dncsday »iit. of Trnf. 1805. 6 19i5 10 10 44 6 5 III 9 38 1 22Tlmrsday Hat. of K. Bank, 1777. 6 2.)|5 8 11 6j 6 47 ta 10 12 93 Friday 5 enters TTl. G 2115 7 11 27 7 36 t 10 44 1 24Siturdav ([ runs low-. G22I5 6 11 48 8 30 .f 1121 25 SUN DAY iJtii Sunday af. Trin. 6 24 5 4 12 9 9 30 V5 inor. 26 Monday y soutli 10 23. 6 255 3 12 29 10 34, V5 2 27,TnHsday -essoulh 1 17. 6 2fi|5 112 50 114Ur 47 23|VVed,iesday rfts. Suuon and Jude. 6 27i5 013 lOmor. :^ 1 45 29 Thursday > stationary. 6 2 -111 59 13 30 50 ?€ 2 59 30j Friday d in perigee. G29|4.58 13 50 2 0> 4 24 31'Saturday ^ south 7 8. 6 314 56 14 9 3 10,' T -i±r 10 f MEMORANDA FOR OCTOBER. % 11 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 ? MEMORANDA FOR OCTOBER. 21 22 I 23 24 25 26 27 30 1846. NOVEMBER, nth Month, begins on Sunday. 45 PPiSilfiil'ipiipilMSM mm COTILLION PARTY. Full Moon, Third Qutirter, PHASES OF THE MOON day. hr. min. 3d lOfh 4 15 M. a 48 A. day. lir. min. New Moon, 18th 6 4 A. First Quarter, 25th 5 35 A. Apouee, lUli. Pcrmi-e, ■.i.>lh. Day of Week. Name. SUNDAY Monday Tlle^day WednePdaj Thursday e I Friday TjSaluidav ejSUNDAY 9 1. Monday 10 jTuesday 11 1 Wednesday 12 Thursday 13 Friday 14 Saturday 15|SIINDAY 16 1 Monday 17 iTuesday !?• Wednesday m Thursday 2(;j Friday 2]|Saturday 22|SIJNDAY 23lMonday 24 jTuesday 2.'» Wednesdaj 2(3 Thursday 2"; j Friday 2^ Saturday 2ii SUNDAY 31j1 Monday MISCELL.\.NE0U3. All Saints. (lU- 7 stars soutli .'jO. Sr. Chiir an- 7 stars souili 1 1 51. Irl south 8 50. 4 south 38. ([ runs low. [elongation enters t . 5 's gr E. Gerry d. 1814. 7 stars south 11 23. N. Y. evac. 1783. Q [in Iter 4 south 22. .\dvent Sunday. St. Andrew. SUN Ris. & Sets sun's dec. South. Moon SeU. i h. m h. m o ' h. m. .^ () 3'. 1 5.^ 14 29 4 2(1 T t> 3: 4 5. 14 48 5 30 H fi3-l 1 5: 15 ' rises. K !J3: 1 5'. 15 25 6 7 8 (5 3: t5l 15 4^ 6 57 n fi3*- 4 4S 16 2 7 49 n 6 3ii 4 4? 16 2( 8 44 ()4t 4 4', I6:i7 9 40 ^ (5 41 4 4( 16 .>» 10 :^7 il 6 4:, 4 4.- 17 11 11 :« a Q44 4 4: 17 2i- nior. a 8 4;; 4 4: 17 4.- 29 TTP G4( 4 4'- 18 1 1 2() IIU IJ4-, 4 4j 18 1( 2 23 :Or !j 4 5;; 4:r 19 4^1 6 2:) t !)5( 4 3( ,9 3t 7 22 V3 1) 5'< 4:i- 20 11 8 2(^ V3 f) 5^ i-M •0 2: 9:^3 ^ () 5!i 4:^ >() :5( 10 41 ^ 7 I 4 3- M 4' 11 50 ^ 7 1 4:^: >J) .-)! trior. ^ 7 :■ 4:{: il K 5i- ^ 7 4 4 3: !1 2i 2 7 T 7 :j 4 :h •13j 3 15 T 7 f 4 3X 21 41 4 22 K 6 44 im 8 21 9 7 9 48 10 29 11 9 1147 ev.29 1 15 2 7 3 15 4 29 5 3G 6 35 7 20 7 58 8 38 9 13 9 50 10 28 11 9 1152 uior. 41 138 2 43 3 59 5 8 6 19 MEMORANDA FOR NOVEMBER. f 10 ^.>^^ t MEMORANDA FOR NOVEMBER. f 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 MEMORANDA FOR NOVEMBER. f 29 30" J846. DECEMBER, 12th Monili, b<.!rin« on Tiiepday. 49 CHRISTMAS FKSTIVITY Full Mnon, Third Ciunrtpr. PHASES OF THE MOON, dav. lir. min. div. ^(1 5 50 A. I New Moon, If^ih 10th 4 20 A. I First Qiinrtpr. 25th 7 40 M. 1 40 M. (I eilHi^i UUItl. Al>''U- Ist. Tuesday Wednesda^ Thursday Friday Saturday SUNDAY Monday Tuesday VVeduesdaj riinrsday Friday ■Saturday :^UM)AY Monday Tuesday Wtdnesdaj Thursday " Friday ■^atnrdav SUNDAY Monday Tuesday Wedi)esda\ Thurs.lay " Friday Saturday -UiXDAY Monday 2! Tuesday 3(|vVednesda\ Sl'TJiursday " MISCELLANEOUS. Enip. Alex. d. 1825, 5 stationary. (I runs high. 8 ©4. /■ stars south 10 44. 4 south 11 41. Van Ruren h. 1782. Marshall Nev shot in [Paris 1815. Milton b. 1608. 4 south 11 19. hiferior $ Q ^ . M Sunday in Advent. Washington d. 1799. ^^uperinr ^ © 9 . Great fire N. Y. 1835. S. Bolivar d. 1830. d runs low. 7 stars south 9 45. (jl stationary. St. Thomas. en. V5. [ 5 Stat. ([ in per. Xewton h. 1042. l4 south 10 16. It'hristnias. St. Stephen. ([ Q. St. John. I nnocenls. [181-2. jTlie Java captured, 4 south 9 50. I 9 's gr. elongation. h. m. h. ra. 7 7 4 31 7 84 31 7 94 31 7 10 4 31 7 114 31 7 124 31 7 13 4 30 7 14 4 30 7 154 30 7 154 31 7 164 31 7 17 4 31 7 184 31 7 19 4 31 7 19 4 31 7 20 4 32 7 21 4 32 7 214 32 7 2-.> 4 33 7 23 4 33 7 23 4 34 7 24 4 34 7 24 4 35 7 25 4 35 7 25 4 36 7 25 4 37 7 2f) 1 37 7 26 4 3r( 7 26 4 39 7 2(') I 39 7 27 4 40 2151 5 27| 22 Oiises. 22 8 5 30 22 10 6 31 i 22 24 7 27 22 32 8 24 22 39 9 21 22 45 10 18 22 51 11 14! 22 57 nior. I 23 2 10 23 6 17 23 10 2 5! 23 14 3 5 23 17 4 5 23 20 5 7 23 23 6 8 23 25 sets. 23 26 6 12 23 27 7 21 23 27 8 31 23 27 9 41 23 27 10 50 23 26 1159 23 24 inor. 23 22 1 6 23 20 2 12 23 17 3 17 23 14 4 19 23 10 5 18 23 G, 6 12 7 15 8 7 8 52 9 34 I 10 15 10 53 1129 ev. 6 47 129 2 15 3 17 4 25 5 31 6 33 7 24 8 6 8 51 9 34 10 18 11 2 1147 inor. 0.34 1 25 2 21 .3 24 4 37 5 51 6 56 7 50 MEMORANDA FOR DECEMBER. 10 MEMORANDA FOR DECEMBER, 11 12 13 14 15 IG 17 IS 19 20 MEMORANDA FOR DECEMBER. 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 29 30 37 53 DESCRIPTIOX nF THE CITY OF NEW-YORK. Location of ths City, Population, &c. NEW-YOUK CITY', tlie |iiiiici|i.il city of ilie Suite of New- York; and in popul-uioii, woiltli, and cuiiinn-icc;. the largest ciiy in the IJiiiled Stales ; de.serves to be denominated the London of Ame- rica. Tlie City Il.dl is in 40° 42' 40" N. lat., and 74° T 8" VV. long, from Greenwich, and 3° 0' Hi" E. long, from Washington. It is ^6 miles X. E. Pliiladelpliia, 210 miles S. VV Boston, ii-io mih's N. E. Wasliington, G70 miles N. E. Charleston, 145 miles S. Albany, 372 I miles S. Montreal, 1370 miles N. E. i\evv-Orleans. i The compact p:irt of the city is situated on the south end of JVew- York or Manhattan Island, at tiie confluence of Hudson or .N'orlh river with the East river, which connects Long Island Sound with thfl harbor 7 feet The s ifest and best portion of the har- , bor, and where the vessels chiefly lie, is along East River, which is I rarely obstructed fiom ice, as the tide sweeps through it with a j strong and rapid current. Islands and Forts. — Several islands within the inner harbor are attached to the city, which are Governor's, Bedlow's, and Ellis's Islands, on all of which are strong fortifications; and Blackwell s. Great Barn, and Randall's Isl.inds, in the Kast River. Governor's Island i-3200 feet from the city at the Battery, and includes 70 acres of ground. It contains Fort Columbus on the south of Ilie island, and (Jasile William rm the northwest point, which is a round tower, (UH) feet in circumference and 00 feet high, with three tiers of guns. There is also a baaery on the northwest side, commanding the entrance through the Buttermilk channel. At the Narrows, on the eastern shore of Long Island, are Fort Hamilton and Fort La Fayette, the latter of which (formerly called Fort Diamond) is built on a reef of rocks, 200 y:ird-) from the slio e. (Jn Stalen Island, at tJie Narrows, are Fort Tompkins and Fort Richmond, both of which are strong fortifications. The entrance from the Sound on East River is defend«.d by Fort Schuyler on Throg's Neck. 54 DESCRIPTION OF NEW-YORK. The Battery. The Battery at the soiitliern end of the city, is situated at the junc- tion of Hudson and East Rivers. It is in the form of a crescent, containing about 11 acres of ground, laid out wiih grass plots and gravelled walks, shaded wiiii trees. From this spot is a fine view of the bay, its islands, and the adjacent shores of New Jersey, and Long and Staten Islands. The scene is generally enlivened by ship- ping under sail. The Park. The Park, called in early times the Commons, is a triangular area of about lOi acres, lying between Broadway, Chatham and Cham- bers streets, is laid out with walks, and planted with trees, and sur- rounded by an iron fence, which cost over ^15,000. It contains the City Hall, the new City Hall or old Alms House, and the Rotunda, now occupied by the New- York Gallery of tlie Fine Arts. It has also, towards its southern part, a public fountain, within a basin, about 100 feet in diameter, which has a variety of jets, which are occasionally changed. When the water is thrown in a single stream, it ascends to the height of about 70 feet, presenting a m-jjestic and interesting appearance. The fountain is designed to be made yet more ornamental. The BowUng Green. The Bowling Green, at the southern termination of Broadway, is an elliptical area, 220 feet long and 140 feet broad, enclosed by an iron fence. It existed before the American Revolution, and formerly contained a leaden statue of George III., which was converted into bullets at that period. It contains a public fountain, which is sup- plied by the Cioton waterworks. In the centre of a large basin is I placed a rude pile of huge rocks in a somewiiat circular form, about 15 feet in diameter, and i-.s many feet high, and from the top issues a jet, with small jets around it, and presents, by the water pouring and tumbling down the sides of the rocks, a wild and picturesque appearance. Hudson Square, or St. John's Park. Hudson Square, or St. John's Park, between Beach, Laight, Var- ick, and Hudson streets, is private property, belonging to Trinity Church, but has been reserved as a permanent public square. It is beautifully laid out with walks, shaded with trees, and surrounded by an iron fence, which cost $26,000. It contains about four acres of ground, has a public fountain, and is, perhaps, the most orna- mental spot in the city. Washington Square. Washington Square, a mile and a half north of the City Hall, be- tween Wooster and MI )ouga I streets, contains about li| acres of ground. Two thirds of the area was the Potter's Field until 1827, and the remainder was purchased by the city for about $78,000, and the whole was enclosed by a wooden fence, which cost nearly $3,000. It is laid out in walks, and planted with trees. Union Place. Union Place, at the northern termination of Broadway is in an elli|itical form, enclosed with a fine iron fence, having a public foun- tain in the centre with ornamental jets, and is a delightful breathing- place to the inhabitants. Farther up the city are other public squares, as Madison Sijuare, Hamilton Square, and others, not yet DESCRIPTION OF NEW-YORK. 55 II uiiliHd. On ilie cast are Tompkins Square and Bellevue, the latter tlie seat of the new almshouse. Croton Water Works. The cheapest and most convenient niode of vi.siting the Distribut- ing Reservoir in Forlielli-street, or the Receiving Reservoir in Eighty- sixth street, is by the cars of the Harlem Rail Ro:ui, wliich leave the Depot, at the junction of Chatham and Centre streets, opposite tlie City Hall, every 15 minutes during the day. Extent of the supphj of water.— Tim minimum flow of water* in the river, where tlie dam is constructed, is considered to l)e twenty- seven millions of gallons for every twenty-four hours, which would be a suthcient supply for one million of inhabitants. It is considered that the supply for the present is abundant, even during a season of drought, for one million and a half of inhabitants, nearly five times the present population ; and other streams can be turned into the Croton, if the time ever arrives when the population of the city will require an increased supply. Velocity of tlie water. — The velocity of the water in the aqueduct has been ascertained to be atjout one mile and a lialf an hour where it is two feet deep. The Dam — is 250 feet long, 70 feet wide at bottom, and 7 feet at top, and 40 feet high, built of stone and cement. It creates a pond five miles long, covering a surface of 400 acres, and contains 500,(100,0(10 gill Ions of water. The ^1i/u(duct proceeds from the dam, sometimes tunneling through S(jlid rocks, crossing valleys by embankments, and brooks by culverts, until it readies Harlem river, a distance of 33 miles. It I is built of stone, brick, and cement, arched over and under, si.\' feet three inches wide at bottom, seven feet eight inches at the top of the side walls, and eight feel five inches high, has a descent of thir- teen and a quarter inches per mile, and will discharge si.\ty millions of gallons in twenty four hours. Aqueduct Bridge at Harlan River. — The Aqueduct will cross Harlem river on a magnilicent bridge of atone, 1,450 feet long, with 14 piers, 8 of ihem 80 feet span, and 7 of 50 feet span, 114 feet above tide water at the top, and will cost $000,000. This bridge is in pro- gress ; and for the present the water is brought across the river in an iron pipe, laid as an inverted syphon. The Receiving Reservoir — Is at Eighty-sixth-street, 38 miles from the Croton Dam, covers 35 acres, and contains 150 millions of gal- lons. The Distributing Reservoii — at Fortieth-strpet, about three miles from the City Hall, constructed with stone and cement, covers four acres, and is 43 feet high above the street, is .30 feet deep when full of water, and holds 20 millions of gallons. Thence the water is dis- j tributed in the city in iron pipes, laid deep under groimd, to be secure froni frost. A section of the wall on one side of the Reservoir, in- cluding the embankment, is 17 feet wide at the top, 35 feet wide at the distance of 16 feet below the top, and "JO feet wide at the bottom. An iron railing bounds the outside and inside of the walk around the top. This Reservoir may be considered the termination of the Croton Aqueduct, and is distant from the Fountain Reservoir at the Croton, forty and a half miles. Estimated Cost. — It was at first estimated th:it it would cost five or six millions of dollars; and at the city charter election of I83.'>. the citizens were required to vole for or against supplying the city in 56 DESCRIPTION OF NEW-YORK. this way. The whole number of votes given was 17,330, of whom 5,yt)3 were against it, and 1 1,307 in favor of it. Cost of th^ fVork — Extent of Pipe laid. — ^I'he whole cost of the vvoik will be about $14,000,000. I'Jiere are laid between the Dis- tributing Reservoir in Fortieth street, and the Battery, 150 miles and 3,G65 feet of pipe, from 6 to 36 inches in diameter, the majority of wliich is from 6 to 12 inches in diameter ; and free hydrants are oppned in most of the streets, besides the fire hydrants. There are 1400 fire, and GOO free hydrants. ' Introducing of the IVater.—The water was introduced into this Reservou- on the 4ih July, 1842, and on the 14th of October follow- ing, llie water was introduced into the city. Analysis of the Croton fVater.—CroUm water, taken from the Croton Dam, when perfectly clear, was found to contain 4.908, or about ^«e grains of solid matter to the gallon. Schuylkill water, taken from the middle basin, on Fairmount, (Philadelphia,) con- tained 4. US grams ol solid mitter to the gallon. Influence of ihc introduction of the Croton Water on the Rates of '^. Insurance — The tnx t(i defray the interest of the Croton Water Debt is 20 cents on the 100 dollars, and the average reduction on the rates of insurance is at least 40 cents on the 100 dollars. In illustration ; of the above, the Board mention the following :— One wlio [lays j| water rent for near forty houses, relates the result of a calculation j he made, viz. : He compared the rate of insurance he paid on this j property previous to the introduction of Croton water, with the rate jj he pays at present, and added to it the Croton water lax, and sub- traciing the two lastfioni liie first, the result is a clear saving of 25 percent. Another states, that he insures on his stock 30,000 dol- lars; previous to the i itroduction of the water he paid 85 cents on the 100 dollars ; he now pays for the same property 35 cents on the hundred dollars, a saving of 150 dollars. If he paid tiie Croton water t.ix on the above amount, it would be 60 dollars, leaving a nettgiiin of 90 dollars. Receipts and Expenditures for 1845. — According to the annual Report of the Croton Aqueduct Board for lf^4.5, the receipts for the year ending 30ih April, 1845, were $1 I8,.i82 74 ; and the expenditure for the same period, $73,41 1 78. t'iiice the last annual report, there have been laid three miles of pipe, very little more being required within the piesent water district. Fronr the 1st of Way io the 21 si of July, 52 days, there was received for water $ I06,9ii4 04. In a corresponding period last year, the amount was $79,294 15, showing an increase in favor of the present ye.ir of $27,669 S9, in 52 days. At this rate, it is calculated that the whole revenue for the year will ni>t be short of Si 160,000, and the annual increase will be equal to 35 per cent., or $-11,417 26. JSTumber of Permits issued. — The whole number of Permits is- sued, to the first day of May, 1845, was 9,110. representing 9.582 water takers; being an increase of 2,225 since the 1st of »VJay, 1844. The discrepancy between the number of permits and the number of water takers, arises Oom a number of houses, steamboats, &.C., being included in one permit. The revenue to be derived from the above named number of water takers, for the full year, may be stated at $131,7h'4 55, divided as follows:— 7,171 private dwellings, $72,123 88 ; 2,411 miscella- neous, comprising manufacturing, mechanical, and other purposes, $5J,6uO 67. The number of permits issued to the date of the present DESCRIPTION «»F NEW-YORK. 57 report, June 30, was J 0,248; being an increase of ],138 since the first of May. Number of Arrivals in 1844. The arrivals nf vessels from forci<;u pons in Xow-York. in 1844, were 2.-i()8. Of these;, 1,575 were Aniciican vrs^tls, 321 were British, b'.i were Bremen. The remainder were from Sweden, France, and other countries. The arrivals coastwise, were 5,3G0. Total ar- rivals, 7,5G8. PASSENGERS ARRIVKD FROM FORKIRN COUNTRIES. In J844, (51,002. In 1H4I, 57,337. J 843, 46.3(12. 1810, l!2,7n7. 1842, 74, number of deaths in rarh month, was as follows : — Janu- ary, G8t5. Fehruarv, 005. iMarcli, G44. April, 5ii0. May. 598. June, 62U. July, 83G. Amriist, 83G. September, 720. Octeber,6G7. November, 6G2, December, 707. De"Ahs in each 1,000 of the population, 22.44. Total mnnhrr of dai.hs in'i.\ years, from 1824 to 1844 inclusive, 141,232— still-born, 9,885. Total interments, 15!, 117. The City Hall. Tlie City Hall, lierelofore regarded the finest building in the city, and one of the liaestin the United SMie.s, has a commanding situa- tion in the middle of the Park. It has more ornament t lan eiiher the Exchansre or tlie Custom House, but less simple frrandcur ; though with its furniture, it is, perhaps, the most intereslin-f buildin the cifilin^'. In the building tin re are iwenty- 'islil ofhresand othor public rooms, the most con.^picuous of vvliicli 58 DESCRIPTION OF NEW YORK. are the Governor's room, and the cliambersof the Common Council and Assistant Aldermen. The Crovcrnor''s Room is appropriated to the use of tlie Governor of tlie Slate wlien lie visits the city, and has been used as a recep- tion room for other distinguished men who have occasionally been here. It is f)2 by 20 feet. The walls of tlie room are hung with a fine collection of portraits, including the Governors of the State, the Mayors of the City since the Revolution, some of the Dutch Go- vernors, and the principal military and naval heroes of the late war all of which are regarded as excellent likenesses. The Common Counril Room is 42 by 30 feet, and the president occupies the identical chair occupied by General Washington wlidi, he presided over the first American Congress, wliicli assembled in New-York. The seats of the aldermen are ranged in a semicircular form, in the centre of which is a table for the clerk. The room contains several fine full-length portraits, painted by Trumbull. The room of the Assistant Akiermen is handsomely fitted up. Hall of Records. The Hall of Records, east of the City Hall, in the Park, is two stories liigh, with a lofty portico of four ionic pillars on each front; and in the rear of it is the JVew City Hal/, formerly the old alms house, which contains fifseen offices, besides the Marine Coii"-! Room, and rooms of the American Institute. Post Office. ROBERT H. MORRIS, POSTMASTER. The Post Office, formerly the Middle Dutch Church, is located in Nassau-street, between Cedar and Liberty streets, now rented to the General Government for 7 years, at the yearly rent of $5,000. This venerable edifice has stood for 115 years, and eight or nine suc- cessive generations (counting those who were aged at the time of its opening) have worshipped within its walls. On Sabbath evening, 11th August, 1844, the closing exercises were held in the church, in the view of resigning it for PostOtRce purposes. During ilie l!i\'o- lutionary war, in 177fi, when the Biitish look possession of the city, several of the churches were occupied and greatly injured by the British soldiery ; but the Middle Dutch Church suffered the most. Being directly adjacent to the famous sugar-house, the scene of atro cious and multiplied cruellies inflicted upon American citizens, it was at once used by the British soldiery for their quarters, for a hospital, and then for a riding school, in which British horsemanship was displayed. TIk; whole of the interior was destroyed and ren- dered desolate. It was not till 1790 that the church was repaired, and again opened for divine worship. The Branch Post Office, recently opened, is situated at the corner of East Broadway and Chatham Square. Office Hours. From 8 A. M. to 7 P. M. On Sunday. From 9 to 10 A. M., and from 12,1- to 1^ P. M. RATES OF POSTAGE. Letters.— Smg\(^, 300 miles or under, 5 cts. Over 300 miles, 10 cts. Double, " " " 10 " " " " 20 " Treble, " " " 15 " " " " 30 " Quadruple, " " 20 " " " " 40 " Every letter or parcel not exceijding lialf an ounce in weight, shall be deemed a single letter ; and every additional weight of half an ounce or less, shall he charged with an additional single postage. DESCRIPTION OF NKW-YORK. 59 Drop letters for delivery only — 2 cents. Advertised letters to be charged with the cost of advertising the same, in addition to the regular postage. Printed Papers. — All newsjuipers of the size of 1,900 sq!iare inches or less, may be sent by the Editors or Publishers thereof to all subscrib(!rs or other persons within 30 miles of the place in which the same are printed, free of postage. Newspapers of the size aforesaid, sent beyond 30 miles from the place of piinting, and not more than 100 miles, 1 cent each; over 100 miles, li cents each. Within the stale where published, 1 cent eacb. Newspapers of greater size than 1,000 square inches, shall he cliarged 24 cents for each coi)y of not more than an ounce weight and 1 cent additional for each additional ounc(\ or fractional excess of not less than half an ounce, for any distance iti the United States. All printed or lithographed circulars and liandbills, or advertise- ments, on quarto post or single cap paper, or paper not larger than single cap, folded, directed, and unhealed, 2 cents eacli, for any dis- tance in the United t?tales. All pan)phlets, magazines, and periodicals, weighing 1 ounce, 2A cents; each additional ounce, or fractional excess of not less than half an ounce, J cent additional, for any distance in the United States. Custom House. The Custom House, on the corner of Wall and Nassau streets, is a splendid building, constructed in the Doric order of Grecian archi- tecture, of white murble, something after the model of the I'arthenon at Athens. _ It occupies the site of the old Federal Hall, in the open gallery of which General Washington was inauguratKl ; and nearly over the front door is the place where he stood when the oath of office, as first President of the United States, was administered to him by Chancellor Livingston, April 30th, 178i». The building is 200 feet long, 90 feet wide, and 80 feet high. At the southern ead on Wall- street, is a portico of eight purely Grecian Doric columns, 5 feel 8 inches in diameter, and 32 feet high ; and on the northern end on Pine-street is a corresponding portico of similar colunuis. The front portico is ascended by eighteen marble steps, and the rear portico on Pine-street by only three or four marble steps. The great business liall is a splendid circular room, flO feet in diameter, surmounted by a dome, supported by 16 beautiful Corinthian columns, 30 feet high, and at the top a skylight. On e.ich side are 13 pilasters, in perfect keeping with the pillars on the two fronts. Cost of Ik" Jiiti/d'iiir.—Tho cost of the building and its furniture was$<)50,000 ; and including the ground, ,$1,175,000. The Custom House is open daily, Sundays excepted, from 10 A. M. to 3 P. M. Entries must be made before 2 P. M. Merchants' Exchange. The Merchants' Exchange is located between Wall, Exchange Place, William, and Hanover streets. It is built in the most substan- tial form, of blue (iuincy granite, and is 200 feet long by 171 to 144 feet wide, 77 feet liigli to the top of the cornice, and IJ4 to tlie top of the dome. The front on Wall street has a reccssf'd portico of 18 massive Grecian Ionic columns, 38 feet higli and 4 feet 4 inches in diameter, each formed from a solid block of stone, and weighing 43 tons. Besides numerous rooms tor various purposes, tlie llotunda in tlie centre is ^0 feet in diameter, with four recesses, making the 60 DESCRIPTION or NEW-YOKK. length nnd breadth each 100 feet, the whole 8f) feet hiph, surmounted with a dome, resting in part on eijiht Corinthian columns of Italian marhic, 41 feet high, and light'^d by a skylight, 25 t' et in dianieter. On the south side of the roof is a telegraph, which couimunicates with another on Staten Island ; and an hourly report is sent down from the telegrai)h to the news room in the FiXcbnnge, for public in- spection. Tiie cost of this building, including the ground, is esti- mated at $1,800,000. Halls of Justice. This building, which occupies the space het«'een Centre, Elm, Leonard, and Franklin streets, is a unique and beautiful specimen of tile Kgypiian style of architecture. It is 253 feet long, and 20i) feet \^id at about 3 o'clock, A. M., and was not subdued till Jl o'clock, A. M., a period of eight hours. Supposing, therefore, the total loss to have been .$((,000,000, the average loss, per hour, was Ii57.5(),0(i0 ; the loss, per quarter of an hour, was $187, .500; the loss, per minute, was $12,500; and the average loss, per sccuvd, was $208 33J ! Bank notes of the denomi- nation of five dollars would not burn as rapidly in a common fire- pl.-ice as property v.as consumed by this confl igration. 61 Corporal ion of tlae City of Ne^v-Torlc. Terms ofufficc cjpirc the night prrrnUnn- the second Tiiesduy in J\Iay. mayor: William F. IIavemeyer, Otiice, 5 City Iliill ; liduse, 93 Vandam-sl. BOARD OF ALDKRMFX. d, Tliondoriis VnnTine, R:Tn:ud J. Mf?seroIe, riiiiiicsJ. Dodgp, Davi.l S. Jnrksnn, Dnni.'l n. Miisus, Th()!ii;is B.Tiippan, William V. Brady William C. Seaman, 1st Ward, Oliver Cimrlicic, Dtli W; 2d " James C.Stoneall, 10th ' :?d " E^hoit Renson, lllh 4th " .Tdsepli A Divvpr, 12tli " 5th " Emanuel B. Hart, I'Mh " 6th " Tiunnasi S. Hcnrv, 14th ' 7th " Timinas Conner.' loth " 8th " Ricliard T. Comptnn IGth " 17th Ward, C randall Rirh Oliver Chnrlick, President, Board of Aldermen. David T. V;ilenfine, OrA. Samuel T. Beekman, Assistant Clrrk. BOARD OF ASSISTANT ALDERMEX. f)tii Ward, Will. Qiiackenbush, Nei.Giay, Jacob Miller, Thomas Spoffbrd, Nathan Roberts, Edwin NiciuiitJ, James D. Oliver, John J.V. Westerveit ITtli Ward, Wiliinm H. rornell. Nathaniel Ptvirce, Frcsidint, Board of Ass'f Aldermen. Olivers. R;irtles, Ciirk, Board of Ass't Aldermen. David J. Chalfi. Id, Jl-xis'nnt Clerk. 1st Ward, John S. fJilbert 9tii 2d " Joseph C. All)ly and cruelly beating or t!)rturing any horse, ox, or other cattle, or any she?p. Entering any armory or arsenal yj'.id, and seizing, taking and carrying away any aims or aniiii;ii:i i:;n lelnnging to this State, or entering any such place with the i i;.—lt' any person shall wil- fully disturb, interrupt or disquit^t any assemblage of people met for I religious worship, by profane discourse, by rude and indecent be- i haviour, or by making a noise either within the place of worship, or I so near it as to disturb the order and solemnity of the meeting; or ' if any person shall obstruct the free passage to any jilace of public I worship, it is the duty of Policemen, who may be present, to arrest I the oftenders. 53. D.stroyvig- or Injarivg- l^ampa, &-r.. — It is the duty of every Policeman, in whose presence or view any person shall wilfully break, take down or carry away, any glass luup hung or fixed in any of the streets of this city, or extinguish the lights therein, or be aiding or abetting in the same, or sJiall wilfully break or deface any gla.'JS, window-porch, knocker or other fi.xture in the said city, to forthwith give information thereof to theMayiir, Recorder, Alderman, I or either of the yjiecial Justices of the said cily ; but if such person or persons shall be unknown to such Policemen, it is their duty to arrest and d(;tnin such offenders, so unknown to them, until they can discover the names of such olfenders, or until the next morning, (if the offence shall be conuniited in the night time, and the otli^nders j shall refuse to discover iheir names,) when such of^.-nders shall be I taken before one of the magistrates herein mentioned. 54. Croton .Aqueduct iyo>-kfi. — It is the duty of Policemen to ar- re.-?t every piMson who shall, Im their presence, baiiie or go into any part fifth'; Croion Aipieduct, or throw any stones, chips or dirt, f>r any other thing whatever, into the IJe.u Aq'Uiducl Board, as to the times they shall leave the f.'i'.hankments of said R L^ervoirs, or the grouruls or building at- t.iclr-d Ihereio. It is also Iheir duty to arrest evety person, tiie Mayor and the Alderman or Assistant Alderman of the respective 70 LEGAL POWERS AND DUTIES OF POLICEMEN. wards only excepted, who shall, in their presence, and without previous permission in writing from the Croton Aqueduct Board, unscrew or open any liydrant belonging or attaciied to the Croton j Aqueduct Works, erected for tlie extinguishment of fires, except in casefe*'of fire in the neighborhood ; or wlio shall leave said fire hy- drant open for a longer time than shall be limited in said permission, or shall use the water for other purposes than may be mentioned in said permission ; or who shall take water from any hydrant attached to Croton water pipes, for the purpose of telling the water, except such persons as may be licensed by the Croton Aqueduct Board to sell water to shipping. 55. Fire-arms — It is the duty of Policemen to arrest any person who shall, in tiieir presence or view, fire or discharge any gun, pis- tol, fowling piece or other fire arms, within this city, excejyt said person sliall llien be iti performance of duty in some military com- pany, and shall by so firing execute the lawful order of liis com- mandant. They must also arrest any person who shall, in their presence or view, fire, discharge or set ofl^, in said city, any rocket, cracker, squib, torpedo, balloon or other fireworks or thing contain- ing any substance in a state ofcombusiion — if, however, the name and residence of the offender be known to the Policeman, and he shall not continue the ofT'ence after being told to desist, and if he shall not Jiave done any serious injury, the Policem.an need not make the arrest immediately, but may prefer a complaint to a Magistrate. 50. Fast Driving. — It is their duty to arrest any person wliom they may see drive or ride any Jiorse through any street, lane, alley or public place within the lamp district, with greater speed than at the rate of five miles an Jiour. 57. Dirt Carts. — They must arrest any person they may see driving, for hire or wages, any cart for the transportation of earth, sand, gravel or clay, imless said person shall liave been specially licensed as a Dirt Cartman, or unless the owner of ihe cart shafl have a license, from the Mayor, to have the same driven ; and must also arrest every person wl)o shall drive or lead or have charge of any horse before a Dirt Cart, which shall be going or standing in any street, lane, avenue or public place, witlinut Jiaving a tight box fitted thereto, tJie sides and forej)art of which shall be two feet, and tiie tailboard not less than sixteen inches high, such box to be of such capacity as to contain twelve cubic feet. Ttiey must also arrest any person having charge of any Dirt Cart wljich shall not have the number of his license and the letters " D. C." fairly painted, with black paint upon a white ground, in plain legible figures and letters, of at least two inches and a half in length, on tlie square of the after part of the shafts of his cart, on both sides thereof. 58. Intoxication.— They must arrest any person they may find in toxicated under such circumstances as amount to a violation of i public decency. 59. Hawkers and Pft^/'ers. — Policemen may arrest any person who shall be found trading as a hawker or pedler of any goods, wares or merchandize, of the growth, produce or manufacture of any foreign country, unless he shall have obtained a license for that puri)ose, under the hand and seal of the Secretary of the State of New- York ; or wJio shall l)e found trading contrary to the terms of his license, or who shall refuse to produce such license. Such li- LKGAL POWERS AND DITIES OF POLICEMEN. Tl censes nn; issued or renewed in the niontli of April in tacU year, and at no other time. CO. Disordirly Conduct, S,-c. — When a breach of the peace is likely to take place, as when persons are openly preparing to fight, the Policemen should give notice of his office, arid immediately inter- fere, tosep.-irate the parties, and to jjreveiit others from joining in the affray. If the offenders do not immediately desist, and the disturb- ance be of a serious nature, he should take the parties into custody, securing also the principal instigators of the tumult, and do every thing in his power to restore quiet. And if the parties flee into a house and there fight and disturb tlie public peace, the Policeman should enter the house, and arrest the otienders and restore quiet ; for it is the duty of Policemen to stop tumults which greatly disturb the public peace, whether they occur in the streets or in buildings. (See Section 43.) Gl. A Policeman must be cautious never to interfere idly or un- necessarily ; but when retjuired to act, lie will do so with discretion, decision and boldness ; and he may arrest any one who may oppose him in the execution of his duty, if he can prove some specific fact, but not otherwise. 6*2. A Policeman is not authorised to arrest, or assist in arresting, without a warrant, a party charged with disorderly conduct, or an assault, or similar offence not committed in his presence, nor should he receive into liis custody a person so charged, unless the party has been arrested by a person who saw the offence coumiitted. But if a person has been severely cut or wounded, and gives info custody the party charged with having cut or wounded him, the Policeman is authorized to take the party into custody, and if the party injured is able to accompany the officer to the Police Court, or District Head Quarters, as the case may be, he must do so. 6."?. Violation of Sunday Latcf!. — Policemen must make complaint before a Magistrate, of all keepers of inns or taverns, or ale-houses, or porter hnuses. or gro( eries, or any other persons authorized to retail strong or spirituous li(iuors, who shall, on Sunday, sell or dis- pose of any ale, porter, strong or s|)irituous liquors, excejit to lodgers in such inns or taverns, or to persons actually travelling on that day in the cases allowed by law. They must also make complaint in like manner of all persons who shall expose to sale any wares, mer- chandize, fruit, herbs, goods or chattels, on Sunday, e.xcept meats, milk and fish before nine o'clock in the morning. CA. Hiir.tr Rarinn-.—U is the duty of Policeman to attend, within their resjieciive districts, where they shall know or be informed that any running, trotting or pacing of horses, or any animnls, is about to be run — for any bet or stakes, in money, goods or other valuable thing, or for any reward to be given to the owner or rider of any aidmal which siiall excel in speed — and there give notice of the ille- gality thereof, and endeavour to prevent such race, by dispersing the persons collected for the purpose of attending the same, and by all other ways and means in their power. And it is the duty of Police- men to make complaint to a Magistrate against all persons who may be concerned in such race, either as authors, betters, slakers, stake- holders, judges to d(?termine the speed of the animals, riders, con- trivers or abettors thereof. 65. They must report to the Criptain all suspicious persons and places, all bawdy houses, receiving shops, pawnbrokers' shops, junk j T2 LEGAL POWERS AND DUTIES OF POLICEMEN. shops, seco id-hand deilers, gaining houses, and all places where idlers, tipjjleis, gamblais and other disorderly suspicious persons may congregaie. 6ii. They must caution strangers and others egainst going into places where idlers, tipplers, gamblers and other disorderly suspi- cious persons cougregale, and against pickpockets, watch strUtTers, droppers, mnck auclionetrs, burners, and all other vicious persona; they must also direct strangers anxl olhers, who may need such di- rection, the nearest and safest way to their places (jf destination, and when necessary cause them to be accompanied to their destination by one oftlie police. Special Duties. Sec. 67. Tiie Policemen will, in their respective patrol stations, I act as Assistant Street Inspt-ctors, and will, within their respective stations, perforin the duties of Health Wardens, Fiie Wardens and j Dock AJasters, under the direction of their Cajilains,— the Corporation [ Ordinances whicli define the ditties of officers in each of those cases, I will be placed in ilieDistrici He:!d Quarters for perusal by the Police { tnen, but it is necessary that they should immediately become fa i miliar with the following jiarticulars : — i 6H. Street Tn.-^pectorti.— To enable the Captain to perform his du- j ties efiiciently, in this respect, the Policemen will report to their res- j peclive Captains all violations of Corporati.)n Ordinances, wiihin 1 their respective patrol stations, among which are the following: — Suffering or permitting any cask, bale, bundle, box, crate or any other ! goods, wares or merchandise, or anything wliatever, to be raised from I any street on the outside of any building, into any loft, store or room ; or to be lowered from the same, on the outside of any building, by I means of any rope, pill ey, tiickle or windlass : To lead, drive oi I ride any horse, or drag any wheel or hand barrow, or lay or place ! any goods, wares or merchandize upon any footpath or side walk: j To obstruct the walks, laid across tlte public streets, or at the head j of the public slips, by placing or stoppuig a horse, cart or other car- i riage, or placing any other obstruction upon or across any of the said j walks ; and if the Street (Commissioner, the Mayor, or any or either j of the iNiembcrs of ilic < nnmion ('mMcil shall order any article or j thing so encuaihi-riiif; ov olishuiiiui;, to be removed, and the same i shall not ba removed witliin ilic linir Iniiiled in such order, tJieStreet j Inspector may ord^r tlie sani!' to be transported to the yard occupied by the Superintendent of Building, or other suitable place. To take any fire engine, hook and ladder or hose carl out of its house, at any ! time or undiir any pretence whatever, uale.-s the Foreman or Assist- I ant Foreman, or at least tv,fo of the Firemen of the Company to I which the satiie shall belong, shall be present and consent thereto: To, at any time, run, diive, wheel or place upon any side walk any fire engine, hfiok and laddi'r or hose cart, except by the special order of one of the Engineers of the Fire Department: For ])ersons who do not belong to the Fire Department to enter any house in which any apj^aratus belonging to the Department is kept, or to handle any | such a|)par:itus: When digging down any road or street, or paving any street, or bnilding any sewer or drain, or trench for water pipes, j or digging r.rul Irnldnsg a well in any public road, street, or avenue; «)r when liaving placed building m itf^riuls in any of the streets or avenufs, or when engaged in buikliiig a!\v vault, or constructing any I iteral drain fn'm any cellar to any j)nhljf, sewer, or performing any work causing obstruction in the public streets, and when such v.-crk LEOAL POWERS AND DL'TIES OF POLICEMEN. 73 ' if left exposed would be dangerous to passengers, to neglect to erect a fence or railing at sucli excavation (tr wori<, in such manner as to prevent danger to pas^sengers who may be travelling such streets, roads or avenues, or to neglect to continue and upliold th(; said fence or railing, as long as the danger may continue ; or to neglect to place I upon sucli fence or railing, at twilight in the evening, suital)le and | sulficient lights, and keep tiiem burning through the niglit, during the j continuance of sucii danger. They musi also give information totiie | Street Commissioner when any vault or cistern is being constructed | in any of the streets within their respective wards, within 48 hours after the construction of such vault or cistern shall have been com- menced. (•9. Jlealth fVard:^ns — must examine and measure every sink, privy, or cistpool. which shall be hereafter constructed wi;hin their stations South of Fourteenth street, before any house, shed orcovi r- ing is placed over or upon them, to ascertain if they are constructed in conformity with the Uoiporation Ordinances ; and they must re- port to their respective Captains all violations of the Ordinances in relation to sinks, privies, and ci.-tixxils. j 70. Fire IVardes — must, every year, in the months of June and { December, and as nmch oftener as they may think proper, examine I the dwelling houses and other buildings, within their respective I stations, for the puipose of ascertaining all violations of any act in ftirce for the nmre effectual prevention of fires in this city; they must examine the fire places, hearths, chimneys, stoves and tlie pipes thereto, ovens, boilers, kettles, and all chemical apparatus whicit in their opinion may be dangerous in causing and pmnioting fires, and also the places where ashes may be deposited ; and upoi finding any of tlx'm defective or dangerous, shall direct tlie owner or occupant, either by a printtd or written notice, to alter, remove or amend the same, in such manner and within such reasonable time as they may deem necessary. It is also the duty of the Fire Wardens, at such times as afbresiiid, to enter into and examine all buildings, livery or other stables, hay boats or vessels, and places where any gunpowder hemp, flax, tow, hay, firewood, shingles, shavings or other combus- tible materials may be lodged, and give such directions in writing, relative to the removal thereof, as tin y may deem necessary. Tiiey shall make an inunediate and minute report to their re.^jiective Cap tains, of all persons neglecting or refusing to cinuply with the order? and directions aforesaid, together with the circumstances of each case; and shall also make report whetlujr any and what cases of violations of the Laws of this State, prohibiiing the construction of wooden buildings, have come to their knowledge, reporting the par- ticular circnmst;tnres of ciich violiiion, and the name of the owm-rs of the building, and <.f the master builder. In every case of a viola- tion of any proNisjon of the " Act for tjje ))revention of Fires, passed April '20, 1 Kid," where the penally prescribed iherebv is the forfeiture if any gunpowder, it shall be lawful fyr any Fire Warden I to seizi- such powder in the ers of the Pro- I teslant Episcopal Church (ilien known as the Church of England I in America,) held thmr ti:st relifiious services in this city, in a small I chapel attached to a fort vvhicli stood near the present Battery. y Tile congregation rapidly increaMng, Triniiy Church was founded y lo meet the emeigeucy in KiiH), during the reign of William and Mary, and seivice was fir?,! pel formed in it on the 6th of February, TRINITY CHURCH. 81 1697. It was then a small square edifice, but was enlarged in IT.'JS, and again in 1737. On the 2lst of Septeuiber, 1776, by the memor- able ftre, which laid waste so great a portion of the city, this edifice was entirely consumed. Jt lay in ruins during the remainder of the Revolutionary war, at the expiration of which, it was rebuilt, and consecrated by Hisliup Provoost in 1790. In J8;W, an examination having been made of the building, it was deemed advisable to pull it down, and erect another iu its place. TJie magnificent edifice, located in Broadway, opposite Wall-st., (erected under the superin- tendence of Mr. Richard Upjohn, archilect,) and of which a view is given, is the result — a result truly creditable to the age and nation, and one which will prove a lasting monument of the munificent character of the venerable corporation of the parish. Description nf the Chunk. — The style of architecture is the per- pendicular fJothic, the peculiar characteristic of which is, that the mullious of the windows, and the ornamented pannelings run in perpendicular lines. It is the first church erected in this country havmg the clerestory, and is built entirely of sand stone, even to the apex of the spire. The aisle walls are 40 feet in heigiit, and are each supported by eight subitantial buttresses, between which arc pointed windows, 24 feet high, beautifully ornamented by tracery cut in stone. A. moulded battlement surmounts these walls, extending their whole length. The clerestory is supported by massive piers, rising from the inte- rior of the church, and a succession of arches springing from them. It is also surmounted by a battlement, which runs over the wall of the western end, and is crowned at the apex by a cross. Each but- tress has upon it a pinnacle crocketed at the angles and terminating in a finial. In the western wall of the church is a magnificent win- dow, termed the altar window, 60 feet high, and 25 feet wide. Its breadth is distributed into seven bays, and its length into two sections by a transom mulllon in the centre, and is, as are all the other win- dows, glazed with stained glass. But that which most strikes the eye with admiration, is the magnifi- cence of the tower and spire. Covered as they are with elaborate work, cut in solid stone, and running up to the height of 283 feet, their imposing grandeur is beyond description. The base of the tower is 30 feet square, and 6 feet inches through, and is supported by double buttresses 4 feet wide, projecting 7 feet 6 inches. The entrance through the tower is 20 feet wide, and 30 feet high, and is surmounted by a bishop's mitre. The whole height of j the tower is 127 feet. The spire is in fine proportion, and rises to the top of the cross which crowns it, to the height of 1.56 feet, thus making the aggregate height 283 feet. It is octagonal, and each angle is decorated by a succession of crockets. The steeple will contain a clock, and a chime of bells. The interior of Trinity is equally as beautiful aa tin; exterior. The nave is 137 feet long, 36 feet wide, and f>7 feet 6 inches high, and receives its support from a double colonnade, each of 7 English piers. The vaulting over it consists of graceful groining, and is de- corated by bosses of clustered foliage. The pews are of oak and capable of seating with ease 800 per- sons. There are no galleries in the church. The vestry at the west end of the church, forms a fine apartment 72 feet in length, with a groined ceiling. In it are placed all the monumental tablets formerly in the other building. Among them is 82 CHURCHES IN N. Y.— COMMISSIONERS IN BANKRCPTCY. the nionuraent erected to the memory of the late Bishop John H. Hohart, executed by Ball Hughes, at a cost of $3000, The Organ, which is to be built by Mr. Henry Erben, will cost $10,000. The case is constructed of oak, of a rich Gothic pattern, from a plan of Mr. Richard Upjohn, and will be 53 feet high, 32 feet deep, and 27 feet wide. Tlie largest wooden pipe is 32 feel long, and 35 by 30 inches, internal measurement. The largest metal pipe is 28 feet long, and 5 ifeet in circumference. There will be four sepa- rate organs, viz. — Great organ, choir organ, swell organ, and pedal organ ; 43 stops — 11 of which will be diapasons, one of 32 feet in length, and 4 of 16 feet in length, besides two reed stops of 16 feet in length. There will be nearly 2500 pipes in the organ, and its total weight will be upwards of forty tons. Dimensions. — The following are the dimensions of Trinity in a compact form : — feet, inches. Length out to ont. - ••• 192 " " inside, e?;clusive of tower 1.37 " Depth of chancel 33 6 Square of tower inside-. ^.... 18 '6 " " " including buttresses 45 " Breadth out to out 84 " " inside 72 " " ofnave 37 4 Height of nave.... 67 G ^ /'j " of tower to cornice 127 " ' ^^ " including sjiire and cross. 2S3 " * ' Attached to the church is a large cemetery, in which rest the re- mains of generations that have passed away, among which are some of the most distinguished men the country has produced: such as Alexander Hamilton, Captain James Lawrence, &c. &c. Claiirclies in ?i ew Yorli. The number of churches of each denomination, is as follows :- African Union, 1 Baptist,.; 23 Congregational, 5 Dutch Reformed, 17 Friends, 4 Jewish,- Lutheran, Methodist Episcopal, Methodist Protestant, Presbyterian, 31 Reformed Presbyterian, 2 Associate Ref 'd Presl)yterian, 2 Associate Presbyterian, 2 Protestant Episcopal, 37 Roman Catholic, 16 Unitarian, 2 Universalist, 4 Welsh, - 2 Miscellaneous, 18 Total number, 206 Coiwanissi osiers isi Baiikriipfcy. Stephen Cambreleng, 20 Nassau ; William W. Campbell, 52 John; Ogden Edwards, 61 Wall ; Sylvanus Miller, 1 Hanover; J. W. Mulligan, 52 John ; James Strong, 45 William. Commissioners in Bankruptcy for Prnvsyhiam'a — Ogden Edwards, 61 Wall. INSTITUTIONS, ETC. »3 INSTITUTIONS-SOCIETIES -ASYLUMS. Asylums. Observe that the arrai)ted in Twelfth-street betwicn Av. 5th and 6lli. 84 INSTITUTIONS.— SOCIETIES. ASYLUMS. Prot. Half-Orphan — Male and female, Av. 6 between Tenth and Eleventh. Roman Catholic Orphan — Is situated in Piince-street, cor- ner of Mott-st. Tlie establishment was incorporated in 1817, and is conducted by the Sisters of Charity, who have usually under their charge about 250 orplians of both sexes. Roman Catholic Half-Orphan — Is situated in Eleventh street, near Av. 7. Institutions a.ncl Societies. Am. Anti-Slavery Soc, 143 Nassau. William Lloyd Garrison, Pres.; Maria W. Chapman, and Wendell Phillips, of Boston, Sees.; Francis Jackson, Treas. Am. Art Union. — The rooms of which are at 322 Broadway, was incorporated by the Legislature of New-York, for the promotion of the Fine Arts in the United States. Each subscriber of Five Dol- lars becomes a member of the Art-Union for the year. Officers: W. C. Bryant, Pres. ; Ebenezer Piatt, Treas. ; Andrew Warner, Rec. Sec; Robert F. Fraser, Sup't. Am. Bible Soc. This Institution, located at 115 Nassau st., was organized in 1816. Its first President was Elias Boudinot, LL.D. ; its second, Hon. John Jay; its third, Richard Varick, Esq.; its fourth and present, the Hon. John Cotton Smith. Its government is in the hands of a Board of Thirty -six Lay-managers of various religious de- nominations. The Society has a house one hundred feet square, extending through from Nassau street to Theatre alley, with a Court in the centre. In this building are the offioes of the Corresponding Secretary, the Financial Secretary, the General Agent and Assistant Treasurer; also the Managers' Hall, the Depository, an establish- ment for printing and one for binding. Something over one thousand Bibles and Testaments are prepared daily. The number issued the past year, ending May 1st, was 429,092 copies. The income of the last year was $166,052, all of which was expended. The Society keeps no permanent funds and can flourish only so long as the public voluntarily sustain it. Books are sold without any profit, and fur- nished gratuitously when there is a necessity. They are sent annu- ally into every Slate and territory of our country, and extensively into foreign lands. Officers: J. C. Smith, Pres.; Kev. J. C. Brigham, and Rev. Noah Levings, Sees.; Wm. Whitlock, Treas.; Joseph Hyde, General Agent. Am. Board of Com. for For. Miss., office. Brick Church Chapel, Nassau cor. Spruce st. The. Frelinghuysen, Pres.; W. J. Armstrong, Sec; H. Hill, of Boston, Treas.; Almon Mervvin. Receiving Agent. Am. and For. Bible Soc. (Baptist,) 350 Broome. S. H. Cone, Pres.; Rufus Babcock and T. Wallace, Sees.; Wm. Colgate, Pres.; I. M. Allen, General Agent. Am. Home Miss. Soc, 150 Nassau. Henry Dwight, Pres.: Rev. Milton Badger and Rev. Charles Hall, Sees.; Jasper Corning, Treas., and H. W. Ripley, Assistant. Am. Institite, was incorporated in 1829, for the encouragement of agriculture, commerce, manufactures, and the arts ; occupies rooms in the second story of the New City Hall, in the Park, where it has a valuable library and reading-room, and interesting models of machinery. It holds an annual fair at Niblo's Garden, which forms one of the most interesting exhibitions in the city and is visited by not less than 20,000 persons yearly. The Jinnual Election is 'id Thursday in May; stated monthly INSTITmOVg. — SOriETIES. — ASYM'MS. m meetiiijis, -Jd Tliur.sdav in eacli iiioiitli. OJicir.-<: James Tallm:ul<{e, Pres.; A. Chandler. Win. Englis, Shepherd Knapp, V.-Presdts.; H. Meigs, R<-c. Sec; T. B. Wakeinan, Cor. Sec; E. T. Backhouse, Treas.; T. B. Wakeman, Siipt. Am. Pkot. Si)( .. 143 Nassau. Rev. Gardner Spring, Pres.; Rev. H. Norton and C. K. Moore, Sees.; Mortimer De Mtitte, Treas. Am. Sabbath Tract Soc, 9 Spruce. L. Crandall, Pres.; F. W. Stillman and P. Stillman, Sees.; T. B. Siilhiian, Treas. Am. Seamkn's Friend Soc, 91 Wall. Edward Richardson, Pres.; John Spaulding and T. Hale. Sees.; C. N- Talbot, Treas. Am. SHiPWREfK Sor., office, Hail of American Institute, west wing New City Hail. James Depeyster Ogden, Pres. Am. Sor. FOR Mkliora-tino the Condition of the Jews, 23 Nassau. Rev. Phillip Miliedoler, Pres.; Rev. John Lillie, Sec. for Dom. Cor.: Rev. John Proudfit, Sec. for For. Cor.; A.M. Burrili, Rec. Sec; Thomas Bussing, Treas. Am. SiNDAY School Union, 152 Nassau. J. C. Meeks and R. B. Camfield, Agents. Am. Temperance Union, 148 Nassau. R. Hyde Walworth, Pres.; Rev. John Marsh, Sec. and Gtneral Agent ; Jusper Corning, Treas. Am. Tract Soc, 150 Nassau. T. Frelinghuysen, Pres.; Wm. A. Hal lock, O. Eastman, and R. S. Cook, Sees.; (). R. Kingsbury, Ass. Treasurer. Ancient Britons' Benefit Soc — W.J. Ormson, Pres.; David Roberts, V.-Pres.; Wm. Lewis, Sec. Apprentices' Library. This Library, at 32 Crosby-street, con- tains 12,000 volumes, which are read by 1800 or more apprentices, and offers facilities for the cultivation of the mind, that prove e.x- ceedingly useful to young mechanics. British Protective Emigrant Soc, of N. Y. — Established for the purpose of preventing Emigrants from bemg cheated and imposed ! upon, will furnish them, free of any charge, with every advice and i information relative to routes, e.xperises of travelling, and all matters I of importance to them, on applying at the office of the Society, 14 | Pine street, near the Custom House. C. H. VV'ebb, Superintendent ; Geo. Wilkie, Active Agent. Central Am. Edt( ation Soc, 3G Park-row. J. C. Hornblower, Pres.; Rev. Eliakim Phel[>s, Sec; W. A. Booth, Treas. Chamber of Com.merce — Instituted 1768: incorporated 1770, re-incorporated 1784. Offi'-(i:<: James G.King, Pres.; fl. K. Bogert, Stewart Brown. V. Pres."; J. J. Palmer, Treas.; P. M. Wetmore, Sec; Com. of ^Irbit ration: Matthew Maurv, Calvin Durand, Chas. King, J. H. Brower, Robt. Kermit. Pilot Cominisswnrrs: R. S. Taylor, C, H.Marshall. Jlunual. Election: 1st Tuesday in May ; meetings 1st Tuesdav in each month. City Bible Soc (Baptist,) 350 Broome. W. H. WyckofT, Pres.; G. N. Bleecker and Lewis Colby, Sees.; Samuel Raynor, Treas. College of Pharmacy.— The object of this Institution isio pre- vent, as far as possible, the many fatal errors in the pre|)aration of medicine. Officers: Constantine Adamson, Pres.; Oliver Hull, John Milhau, and Geo. D. Coggeshall, V.-Presdts.; James S. Aspinwall, Treas.; John Meakim, Sec. College of Phys. and Surgs. — .\ handsome edifice at 07 Crosby street; was founiled in 1807, has eight professors, and about 100 ] students. Tlie Library consists of about 1,00!) vohuues. Degrees | are conferred by the regents of the University, at the recommenda- tion of the board of trustees. The whole expense of the course of INSTITUTIONS. — SOCIETIES. — ASYLUMS. lectures vvhicli commence on the first Monday in November, and continue four months, is about $100. Columbia College. — Columbia College, at the foot of Park- place, near Broadway, was chartered by George II., in 1754, by the name of King's College, and confirnied by the Legislature of New- York, in 1787. The original name was changed to " Columbia College" in 1784. It has a president and 10 professors, 1170 alumni, 100 students, and 14,000 volumes in its libraries. The building is 200 feet long and 50 feet wide, wiili t\\'o projecting wings, one at each end, in which are accommodations for the families of the professors. It contains a chapel, lecture rooms, hall, museum, and an extensive philosophical and chemical apparatus. The funds amount to about $200,000, and the annual income to $7,000 or 1^8,000. The number of graduates, since its establishment, including the year 1844, is about 2,000. There are now in college about 100. Commencement: the day after the first Monday in October. Vacation: from August 1st, to the first Monday in October. The Grammar School attached to the College, under the direction of Prof. Anthon, has usually from 200 to 300 scholars ; and instruc- tion is given in all the branches necessary for admission into any college, or for the counting-house. DoM. Mission Soc. iBnpfi.^t,) 12 Maiden-lane. N. C. Piatt, Pres.; A. Wheelock and J. B. Kader, Sees.; John N. Wyckofi; Treas. Ethnological Soc. — Formed in 1842, for the purpose of inquiring into antiquities, history, languages, geography, &c. Officers: Albert Gallatin, Pres.; E. Robinson, H. R. Schoolcraft, V.-Presdts.; J. R. Bartlett, Cor. Sec; Chas. VVeiford, Rec. Sec; A. I. Cotheal, Treas. Farmers' Club. — Meet first and third Tuesday of each month, at American Institute. Female Moral Reform Soc, 36 Park-row. Mrs. C. W. Haw- kins, Pres.; Mrs. S. R. Ingraham, Sec; Mrs. Jane Bealty, Treas. For. Evangelical Soc, 36 Park row. A. B. Hasbrouck, Pres.; E. N. Sautel, Gurdon Buck, and Robert Baird, Sees,; William W. Chester, Treas. For. and Am. Anti Slavery Soc, 122 Pearl. A. Tappan, Pres.; L. Tappan, Sec; Wm. Shotwell, Treas. Franklin Lyceum, (no information.) French Benevolent Soc. — Louis Leclerc, Pres.; Geo. Guynet, Sec; E. Goulard, Treas. Friendly Soc. of Operative Masons, (no information.) Friendly Sons of St. Patrick.— James Reyburn, Pres.; W. G. Fitzgerald, Sec; C. M. Nanry, Treas., 86 Pine. Gen. Theol. Seminary of the Prot. Epis. Church in the United States, cor. of Av. 9th and Twenty-first street, consists of two hand:5ome buildings, each 110 feet by 53, constructed of stone in the Gothic style, was founded in 1819, has five professors, and 7,260 volumes in its library. The aft'airs of the Seminary are managed by a Standing Committee, consisting of an equal number of clergymen and laymen, with a Treasurer and Secretary. German Franklin Ben. Soc. — Meet at 552 Pearl-street. J. F. Cans, Pres.; I. Kreuzer, V.-Pres.; Thomas Schimazeck, Sec; I. F. Braitmayer, Treas. German Soc. of City of N. Y.—C. II. Sand, Pres.; T. Victor, V.-Pres.; A. F. Spies, Treas.; Tlios. Acliillis, Sec; G. L. Paulsen, Agent, 105 Fulton-street. j INSTITFTIONS. — SOCIBTIKS.— ASYLUM9. 8T I Hebrew Ren. Soo.— M. IM. Xoah, Pies.; S. Dieyfous, V.-Pres.; j Jolin Levy, Tieas.; Homy Goldsmitli, Sec. i Hibernian Univ. Ben. Soc, 43 Piinco. John Farrigan, Pres.; i Farrel Lunncy, V.-Pres.; Julin Heaney, Treas.; Jainus M'Guire, ! Cor. Sec; Francis O'Rielley. Ucc. Sec. I Home Miss. Soc. (Bapfist,) 350 BrooniP. Fnend Humphrey, Pres.; B. M. Hill, David Bellamy, Sees.; K. VV. Marvju, Trcas. Irish Emigr.vnt Soc, 6 Ann street. T. VV. Clerke, Pres., G. Dillon. Jos. Stuart, v.- Pres.^ James Reyburn, Treas.; J.T. Doyle, M. J. O'Connor, Sees. Italian Ben. Soc. — Felice Argenti, Pies.;. Sebastiano Dacorsi, Treas.; O. Ferrero, Sec. 1. O. OF O. F. Library Ass., rooms at 31 Canal-street. Lyceum of Nat( ral History.— Tliis institution is now estab- lished in the Medical College of the Universit}', (formerly the Stuy- vesant Institute,) 659 Broadway. The Library and Collections are arranged in the second story, and occupy tlie whole front. Induced by the very liberal terms offered to them by the pnjfessors of the Medical College, they have removed to this building during the past year. The Lyceum was founded in 1818, and has steadily pursued iU? scientific objects with success. It possesses a large library, and extensive collections, in each department of natural history. The skeletons of animals, the birds, fishes, reptiles, minerals, fossils and j sbelle, areal! arranged for exhMUon g-ratuitousfif. Three volumes, descriptive of new discoveries, have been published, and will be continued. The society is in correspondence witli similar scjcieties in Europe, and exchanges with them and others, its publications, i &.C., by which means the library contains several works not other- j wise attainable. Its objects are the advancement of Zoology, Botany, Mineralogy, Geology, and Couchology. Th« meetings are held on every Monday evening throughout the year. Officers: Joseph ; Delafield, Pres.; Jno. A. Smith, Abraham Halsev, V.-Presdts.; J. H. ' Redfield.;,Cor. Sec; R. II. Brownne, Sec; J. P. Giraud, jr., Treas. Marine Soc. — Capt. Chas. H. Marshall, Pres.; Wm. Thompson, J. J. Dickinson, V.-Presdts.; Ja^nes Copland, Treas.; Henry Russell, Secretary. Mariners' Family Inbtstrial Soc. — ^The object of this society is twofold ; to provide work, at a fair remuneration, for the female | members of the families of seam.en, and to relieve such families of i the same as are incapable of labour, including their widows and! orphans. The more effectually to carry out the design of the society, ; I a clothing store has been opened at 325 Pearl-street, vvhere may be 'found an assortment of garments for seamen and others. 0[Jiccrs: I Mrs. C.W. Hawkins, First Directress; Miss xM. Vale, 2d do.; Mrs.T. j O. Taylor, Treas.; Mrs. C. Tracy, Sec. Mechanics' Ixstitl'te.— This Institute, the rooms of which are 1 in the basement of the City Hall, has for its object the instruction of I mechanics and others in science and the arts. The Institute has es- tablished annual courses of popular lectures. It has an excellent library, containing about fifteen hundred volumes ; a reanin.'-room, 'supplied with popular reviews, literary and scientific journals, and | I newspapers; a museum of models of machinery, and a valuable 'collection of chemical and philosophical apparatus. Under the I superintendence of the Board of Dircjctors, a male school was com- 1 menctid in Xovember, 1838 ; and a female school in May 1839, both of jwhich have been eminently successful. Officers: J. J. Mapes, Pres.; 88 INSTITUTIONS. — SOCIETIES. — ASYLUMS. J. E. Coffee, Clarkson Crolius, V. Presdts.; T. S. Cummings, Treas.; W. A. Cox, Cor. Sec; Jas, Howland, Rec. Sec; C. L. Barritt, Actuary. Mechanics' and Tradessien's See. and School, 32 Crosby. Officers: J. A. Westervelt, Pres.; T. C. Chardeavoyne, J. P. Moore, v.- Presdts.; R. E. Mount, Treas.; Isaac Fryer, See.; Robt. Prc.voost, Collector and Door-keeper. Stated Meetings: Jst Wednesday in each month, at H2 Crosby -street. Mercantile Library Ags., on tbe corner of Beekinan and Nas- sau-streets, was formed for the special benetit of merchants' clerks, and is one of the most useful institutions of its kind in the city. It has a library of more than 20,000 volumes, also a beautiful reading- room, open on week days, well warmed and lighted, and much fre- quented. Offi-ers: Chas. E. Milnor. Pres.; C. L. Everett, V.-Pres.; H. K. Bull, Cor. Sec; C. M. Wheatley, Rec. Sec; W. A. Kissam, Treas.; S. M.Richardson, Librarian ; T. D. Greene, Ass. do. Merchants' Vigilant Ass., (organized to investigate and ex- pose abuses in trade, to prevent frauds^ and punish the fraudulent.) Officers: Thos.Tiieston, Pres.; T. C. Doremus, V.-Pres.; David Wes- son, Treas.; Woodward & Dusenbery, Sees. BIetropolitan Asa., 554 Broadway. Henry Kiddle, Pres.; J. H. Fanning, V. Pres.; J.J. Anderson, T. J. Taylor, Sees.; S. H. Cudlip, Treas.; L. B. Hardcastle, Librarian. Miss. Soc, {MethodisU) 200 Mulb rry. Rev. J. Soule, Pres.; Francis Hail, Sec; G. Lane, Treas. National Academy of Design. — See places of Amusement. New England Soc. — M. H. Grinnell, Pres.; Thomas Fessenden, Simeon Draper, jr., Vice-Presdts.; A. G. Hazard, Treasurer; A. A. Weeks, Secretary. N. y. Baptist Sund. Sch. Miss. Ass., (no information.) N. Y. Bible Soc 91 Wall and 115 Nassau. John Slosson, Pres.; E. H. Blatchford, T. Bond, jr., Sees.; G. H. Willisms, Treas.; L. P. Hubbard, Agent. N. Y. Bible and Com. Prayer Book Soc, 20 John. Rev. B. T. Onderdonk, Pres.; W. H. Bell, Sec; T. C. Butler, Treas. and Agent. N. Y. AND Brooklyn For. Miss. Soc. — Pelatiah Peril, Pres.; Rev. W. Addams, A. Merwin, Sees.; J. W. Tracy, Treas. N. Y. City Sund. Sch. Soc. {Methodist,) 200 Mulberry. S. A. Purdy, Pres.; Wm. Truslow, J. F. Truslow, Walter Keeier, Sees.: J. W. Rumsey, Treas. N. Y. City'Tract Soc, 150 Nassau, Pres.; Wm. Walker, Treas.; A. R. Wetmore and Rev. Isaac Orchard, Sees. N. Y. Commercial Ex. Ass. Officers: Seixas Nathan, Pres.; W. Borrowe, V.-Pres.; S. I. Josephs, Sec; W. H. Hayes, Treas. Daily (public) meetings in the Rotunda of Merchants' Ex. N. Y. Historical Soc. — ^This Society is located in tbe New-York University Buildings, Wooster-sireet, corner of Waverley-place, and has a valuable library of 12,000 volumes, besides a collection of coins and medals. Library hours: Oct. 1st to April 1st, from 10 A.M. till 2 P.M., and from 7 P.M. till 9 P.M.; April 1st to Oct. 1st, froBi 9 A.M. till 1 P.M., and from 4 P.M. till 6 P.M. Officers: Albert Gallatin, Pres.; Luther Bradish, Thos. De Witt, V.-Presdts.; J. R. Bartlett, For. Cor. Sec; John Jay, Dom. Cor. Sec; Rev. Cyrus Mason, Treas.; John Bigelovv, Rec. Sec; George Gibbs, Librarian, and Geo. H. Moore, Assistant do. INSTITTTTinNS. — SOCIETIES. — ASTLUM8. 89 N. Y. Hospital.— The Xew-Yoik Hospital, at 319 Broadway, is a colleclion of extensivo buildings, in a haiidsDiue situation, with a fine yard. There are ten attending and consulting piiysicians and surgeons, and over '200 patients. A. Y. Law Inst. Library.— Wjis established in 1828, and incor- porated in 1830. The Library, wiiich is kei)t in room No. 4, in the City-Hall, contains about 3,500 voUunes of select law books, includ- ing nearly the whole series of English and American Reports. Ini- tiation fees, §20; annual dues, $10. Members of the bar from abroad, and the Judges of the Courts are entitled to the use of the Library. Officers: Saml. Jones, Pres.: J. Anlhon, Gerardus Clark, J. VV. Gerard, V.-Presdts.: Joshua Coit, Treiis.; Alexan. H. Dana, Sec; John VV. Edmonds, Librarian ; W. H.Griswold, Ass. do. N. Y. Marine Bible Soc, 91 Wall. Hugh Aikman, Pres.; Wm. Poole, L. P. Hubbard, Sees.; VVm. VVoodhull, Treas. N. Y. Mkmcal Soc— Edward Delatield, Pres.; Isaac Wood, V.- Pres.; B. R. Kobson, Treas.; Benj. Drake, Cor. Sec; Wm. P. Buel, Rec. Sec N. Y. QiARANTiNE Hospital. — Is located on Sfaten Island, and was established by an act of the Legislature m 1820. The Staten Island Ferry, at the foot of Whitehall-street, near the Battery, lands passengwrs cpiite near the Hospital ; the boats of which leave the citv several times during the day. Henry Van HovenbeiKh. Hialtk Officer; Alexander F. Vache, Resident Phijs.; Steven R. Harris, Hiaitli Comnr.; The last officer takes charge of the receipts and e.\penses. N. Y. Sa' RED Misic Soc— Established in 1823. Offirers: L. B. Wyman, Pres.; G. E. Vanderberg, W. A. Tyler, V.-Pre>dts.; H. R. Yenne. Sec; J. P. Perkins, Treas.; George Whitlock, Librarian ; U. C. Hill, Conductor. N. Y. SdENTiKU' Ass.— E. Le Fevre deSt. Remy, Pros.; Nathan. O'Cornwall, V.-Pres.; C. T. Harris, Sec. N. Y. Soc Library.- This is an old institution, founded in 1754, and has a handsome and substantial edifice of brown freestone, at 348 Broadway, with six ionic columns resting on the basement story. It is one of the most interesting buildings of the city, and b(•^ides hav- ing spacious acconmiodations for the library, has also a handsome and commodious lecture room, and rooms for the Academy of De- sign. The library is open on every week day, w ith a few exceptions, from 8 A.M. to 10 P.M., and c(mtains nearly 40,000 volumes. Shares or rights of membership, ,S25 ; Annual dues, $6, or $100 for a free right. Officer.'^: Wm. Inglis, Sec; A. K. Rodgers, Treas.; Philip J. Forbe?. Librarian. N. Y. Gallery of the Fine Arts.— See places of Amusement. JVew-York Sof. OF Lit. — Nicholas (iuuckenbos, Pres ; A. G, Forsyth, \V. H. Armstrong, Sees. ; A. W. Leggat, Treas. N. Y. State CJolonization Sor.— Office in the Brick Church Chape!. A. G. Phelps. Pres.; Rev. G. Spring, V. Pres.; Rev. D. L. Carroll, Sec; Moses Allen, Treas. N. Y. Stock & Ex. Board.— Oarers.- David Clarkson, Pres.; Edward Prime, V. Pres.: J. W. Bleecker, Treas.; B. Hart, Sec. Meetings daily at the Merchants' Ex. N. Y. S. S. Union.— 152 Nassaust. Isaac Ferris, Pres.; N.N. Halsted, Sec; Jona. Leavilt. Treas.; J. C. Meeks, agent. N. Y. Typoo. Soc.— John Gray. Pres.; James Narinc, V. Pres.; G. S. Wliaram, Sec; Geo. Mather, Treas. 90 INSTITUTIONS. — SOCIETIES. — ASYLUMS. N. Y. Vaccine Inst.— Sti'J Broome and 20 Third-street. John C. Beales, Pres.; Jiimes Weir, Rec. Sec; Luke Ilassert, Cor. Sec; O. W. Slurtc'vanl, Tre.is. Presb. Board of Education. — 23 Centre-street. Alex. Henry, Pres.; M. B. Hope, Sec; J. B. Mitchell, Treas. Presb. Board of For. Miss. — 23 Centre st. Samuel MiJer, Pres.; Walter Lowrie, Sec; Daniel Wells, Treas. Presb. Board of Dom. Missions.— 23 Centre-street. Ashbel Green, Pres.; W. A. McDowell, Sec.'; Thomas Hoge, Treas. Prison Assoc, of New-York. — Office corner of Pine and Nas- sau-streets. Its objects are, I. The auislioration of the condition of prisoners, whether detained for trial, or finally convicted, or as witnesses. 2. The improvement of prison discipline and the govern- ment of Prisons. 3. The encouragement of reformed convicts after their discharge, by assisting them in obtaining an honest livelihood. {)i^Any person who contributes annually, shall, during such j contribution, be a member of the Association. A subscription of $25 constitutes a member for life. There is a female department consisting of such as take an inter- est in the objects of the society, and give their active aid to promote them. Officers: Hon. William T. McCoun, Pres.; Isaac T. Hopper, General A^zent. Prot. Epis. City Miss. Soc— Rev. B. T. Onderdonk, Pres.; W. Mulligan, Sec; Lewis Phillips, Trcas. Prot. Epis. Diocesan Miss. Com. — Rev. B. T. Onderdonk, Pres.; T. C. Butler, Sc-c; C. N. S. Rowland, Treas. Prot. Epis. Diocesav Society for Promotion of Religion AND Learning. — Rev. B. T. Onderdonk, Pres.; Win. H. Harrison, Sec; J. F. De Peyster, Treas. Prot. Epis. General Miss. Dom. Committek. — 281 Broad- way. Rev. B. T. Onderdonk, Pres.; Rev. J\. S. Harris, Sec. and General Agent ; T. K. Stanford, Treas. Prot. Epis. Gen. Miss. For. Com.— 281 Broadway. Rev. B. T. Onderdonk, Pres.; Rev. P. P. Irving, Sec. and Gen. Agent ; Dr. J. Smyth Rogers, Treas. Prot. Epis. Ge\. S. S. Union.— 20 John-street. Rev. A. Ten Broeck, Sec; J. W. Mitchell, Treas.; Daniel Dana, jr.. Agent. Prot. Epis. Tract Son.— 2i) Joiin-st. Rev. B. T. Onderdonk, Pres.; Rev. E. N. Mead and D. H. Hoyt, Sees.; T. C. Butler, Treas. Public School Soc— Grand, corner Elm. , Pres.; Lindley Murray, V. Pres.; Anthony P. Halsey, Treas.; Joseph B. Collins, Sec; Samuel W. Seton, Agent. Sailors' Snug Harbor. — This Institution, locited on the north side, of Staten Island, was established by a fund left by Capt. Robert B. Randall, of New-York, who died in 1801, and bequeathed a large amount of real estate in this city, now of great value, for the support of aged and infirm seamen. The principal edifice with the wings, is about 22.5 feet in length, surrounded by a farm of 16!) acres of land, the property of the Institution. There are usually about 100 sailors supported at this establishment. Mode, of visitin>r it, by the Port Riclmiond Ferry, at the foot of Battery Place, North River, the boats of which depart several times during the day, and land passengers as above. Seamen's Fund and Retreat. — Located on Staten Island, near the (Quarantine. The Seaman's Retreat was organized for the pur- pose of supporting sick and disabled seamen in a separate establish- INSTITUTIONS.— SOCIETIKS. — COLLEGES. 91 ment from tli« sick passeng-rrs arriving at this port. It was incor- porated in ii^3!, and sustained by a fund raised by a tax on masters of vessels and seamen arriving at New-York, which amounts to about $27,000 annually. A loan of $45,000 was granted some years ago, from the funds of the Marine Hospital, arising from alien pas- sengers. The office in New York, is at No. 8 Old Slip. Soc. FOR THE Promotion of Collegiate and Theo. Educa- tion AT THE West. — Hon. B. F. Butler, Pres.; D ivid Leavitt, Treas.; Rev. T. Baldwin, Cor. Sec : Rev. Asa D. Smith, Rcc. Sec. S. S. Union (j]/tt/t(<ut 100 students. The library contains over 16,000 volumes. R. T. Haines, Pres.; Chas. Butler, V. Pres ; Rev. J. VV. McLane, Recorder ; A. P. Halsey, Treas. Faculty: Rev. H. White, Profesdnr of Systematic Theology ; Rev. Edward Robinson, Professor of Dib^ Lit.; Rev. S H. Cox, Profes- sor of Bib. and Ecr.. History ; Rev. A. D. Smith, Professor of Pas- toral Thruloiry ; Rjv. E. Bobinson, Librarian. United Irish Repeal Ass. — John Egan, Treas.; Bartholomew O'Connor, Sec Welsh Ben. Soc of the city of N. Y. — Evan Griffith, Pres.; Enoch Morgan, Treas.; G. W. Griffith, Cor. Sec. Tne objects of this Society are the advising and protecting Welsh emigrants. Ap- ply to the British Protective Emigrant Society, 14 Pine street, for in- formation. University Medical College — See University of the City of New-York. University of the City of New-York. — This fine edifice, of white marble, in the Gothic style of English collegiate architecture, stands on Washington Square, between Washington Place and Waverley Place, and is 180 feet long and 100 wide. The chapel, a highly finished room, receives its light from a window of stained glass in the west front, 24 feet wide and 50 feet high. This institu- tion was founded in 1831, has a President and 11 professors, a valu- able library and phil )sophical apparatus. Connected with it is an extensive grammar school, an,Tues & Friday, 27iMond.&Tliurs. 500,000 300,000 720,000 420,000 600,000 200,000 000,000 2,050,000 1,440,0;)) 6.32.000 200,000 1,400,000 750,000 750.000 655,000 1,200,000 500,000 4J),000 1,000,000 ll,5.)0 20,012 50,000 2,000 20,000 20,000 3,000 16,000 14,000 20,000 8,000 12,000 41,000 80,000 25,28,) 8,000 20,800 15.000 1.5,000 13,100 60,000 10,000 10,000 20,000 DIVIDKNDS. $100 1 May and Nov. 100 100 500 100 45 Ian. and July. Jan. and July. May and Nov. May and Nov. Feb. and Aug. May and Nov. 10 Jan. and July. 30 May and Nov. 25 May and Nov. 50 Feb. and Aug. 50 Feb. and Aug. 18 May and Nov. 25 June and Dec. 25 May and Nov. 50 Dec. and June. .')0 Jan. and July. 50 April and Oct. 50 Jan. and July. 20 do. do. 50 do. do. 40 do. do. 50 May and Nov. SAVINGS. TKKASUKF.R. CroTHnlsted," Til. Rend, Acc't. r^nmbert Suydam. Jos. W. Als.!|),jr. INTKR. T PVYaI i3d Mon. July & Jan pdMon. July & Jan 'January ai'.d July, jlst Jan. and July. DA. s wai;;; oi'EN. Mo" We Fri Wat fm 4 to Gpm Fridays for females cxcliCy. Mon. Til. &Sat. 5 to 7 p.m. Mon Wf d & Fri. 5 to 7 p.m. Daily, from 11 to 2 p. m. BAIMTC DIRECTORS AND NOTARIES— Continued. B.INK or JSrEfV-YORK.—.lohn Oothout,.'G. E. Rowland, Henry Bceknian, Robert Benson, James Marsh, P. Scliermerborn, F>. B. Graves, C. P. Leverich, Frederick Scliuchardt,C. E. Rill, John H. Hicks, Josiah Lane, L. F. Flolfman. J^Tijiary, IV. D. Waddington. BAKK OF STATF, OF .VE TI-FOiJfl:'.— Joseph Lawrence. Reuben Withers, Isaac Townsend, John Steward, C. A. Davis, H. W. Hicks, Ferdinand Suvdam, Joseph Lawrence. Jonas Conkling, L. A. Puar.'z, J. D P. Ojjdcn, Robert Center, Leioy M. Wiley. JW tary. IV. //. Vaiur. BUTCITFRS .nxn DnnFERS\—T>:\\]A Cotheal, Amest Fink, J. W. Mersoreaii, J. B Corlies. Jaui"^ Mills, John Gray, Jo«eph Britton, G. B. Smith. R. \V. Howes, W. G. Hunt, J. E. Cooley, J. Miller. J^otanj, Ji-io-ustiis Sch"//. CHEMICAf, lljJjVfC.—J.Cl. Jones, C. V. S. Roosevelt, J. D. \V..lf<- l',r^ s June &. Uec. Liquidating. Feb. & Aug. April & Oct. June &: Dec. Jan. & July. April & Oct. Aug. & Feb. June & Dec. July & Jan. Yearly. Aug. & Feb. Liquidating. 'p- 1 i ^ § §§s s ^ s^^^ § a; 1 10,000 5,000 10,000 6,000 12,000 8,000 6,000 8,000 8,000 6,666 5,000 cap'l. 200,000 200,000 260,000 210,000 140,000 500,000 500,000 200,000 300,000 300,000 300,000 400,000 217,517 200,000 150,009 300,000 150,000 200,000 200,000 250,000 400,000 100,000 SECRETARY. Jacob Brouwer, Lewis Benton, - - David A. Bokee, D. F. Curry, - - - W.Jenkins,Sec. inNY A.S.Chew,Sec.inNY Nicholas Carroll, - Thomas Glover, - Gold S. Silliman, - Joseph Strong, - - Niel Gray, - - - W. B. Bolles, - - Joseph Torrey, - - Lewis Phillips, - - Lebbeus Chapman, Wm. W. Dibblee, - G.T. Hope, - - - Thomas Bull, jr., Elwood- Walter, - i Q X Charles Town, - - - - A. G Hazard, Agent, - - JDPOgden.A M.Merchant,v.p. Philip Hone, ----- Richard A. Reading - - - A.C. Hallock, Agent, - - Justin Morrison, - - - - S. A. Lawrence, JBNoncs, v.p. E. W. Laight, ----- John Brouwer, . - - - Lambert Suydam, - - - Asa Bi;:/low, Agent, - - - Francis T. Luqueer, - - - D. A. Bokee, Agent, - - - A. Ogden, N.G. Rutgers, v. p. Timothy Wliittcmore, - - John Nelson, jr., Agent, - - R. Havens, Abm. G.Thompson, - - - S. Baldwin, J. Harrison, v. p. T. W. Thome, - - . . F. J. Hosford, Agent, E. J. Anderson, . . - - Asa Bigeiow, Agent, - - - J. L. Baldwin, Agent, - - L. Gregory, Joseph Hoxie,v.p. i 56 Wall, 89 Wall, - 58 Wall, - 2&4Mer.Ex., 61 Wall, - 149 Fulton, 63 Wall, - 35 Wall, - 71 Wall, - 61 Wall, - 53 Wall, - 46 Pine, .59 Wall, - 2&4 Mer. Ex. 50 Wall, - 400 Hudson, 67 Wall, - 66 Wall, - 48 Wall, - 65 Wall, - 50 Wall, - 50 Wall, - 68 Wall, - 46 Pine, .35 Spruce, - 63 Wall, - iEtna, ----- yEtna, of Hartford, Ct., Alliance Mutual, - - .\merican Mutual, , City, ------ City & Co. Mut. of Phil. 1 Pa. - - - - - Columbus. (Ohio,) - Croton, Eagle, - - ; East River Mut. Ins., 1 Equitable, - - - - Firemen's, Bost., Mass. ' Firemen's, - - - - ; Franklin, of PhU. Pa., General Mutual, - - j Greenwich, - - - - Hartford, Hartford, Ct., ' Howard, 1 Hudson, ----- 1 Jackson Marine, - - \ Jetferson, - - - - King's County Mutual, Manhattan, . - - - Manufacturers', Boston, 1 Mechanics', Newark, i Mercantile Mutual, - INSVRANCE COMPANIES IN NEW-YORK. 99 a z a > a < < i °^ 1 o » Q H a. Liquidating. Liquidating. Liquidating. June & Dec. Yearly. June & Jan. April &'Oct. Jan. & July. June&, Dec. June & Dec. Feb. & Aug. Liquidating, June &. Dec. April & Oct. Yearlv. May & Nov. Jan. & July. June & Dec. 1 gs ^s ^:^i|S^i t2^ z 4,000 5,000 7,000 4,000 10,000 12,000 6,(100 2,000 3'000 5,000 14,000 2,000 10,000 7,500 3o0,U00 400,000 300,000 350.000 150,000 500,000 300,000 300,001) 300,000 200,000 300,000 250,000 350,000 150,000 150,000 250,000 105,000 Jeremiah P.Tappan. A. H. Muller, A. B. McDonald, Joseph B. Collins, Wm. James Boggs, W. Hibbard," - - R. W. Martin, - - Daniel UnderhiJl, Joseph Greenleaf, Jolm McBrair, Peter R. Warner, W. W. Dibblee. John Whitehead, Lebbcus Chapman, James Wilkie, A. B. Hodges, Asa Bipelow. Agent, - - riioH. Hale, Receiver. W.\eilson,BRWinthrop,v.p Nathaniel Richards, - - George Ireland, - - - Z. Cook, jr., A. Pell, v. p. Joseph W. Savage, - • Thomas Hale, Agent, J. H. Brower, Agent, I'eter Puickney, - - - J. Smyih Rogers, - - (J. 11. Jones, - - . John Van Nostrand, - - Robert Ainslie, - - - Richard Whiley, - - - Simeon Baldwin, - - - A. G. Hazard, Agent, II do Ul CO S £ A. B. Neilson, A Seton, v.p. Elias G. Drake, - - - John L. Bowne, - - Asa Bigelow, Agent, Lemuel Richardson, - - i c c u i5 Merchants', Bost. Mass. 46 Pine, - Merch. Mar. liquidafg, 64 Wall, - Merchants' Mutual, - 10&12M. Ex Merchants' Fire, - - 167 Wall. - Mutual Fire, 64 Wall, - Mutual Safety, - - 56 Wall, - National, - - - - 62 Wall, - National, of Boston, - 64 Wall, - N.J.Mar. & Fire, New'k 91 Front, - N.Y. Bowery, - - - {124 Bowery, N. Y. Contributionship, 6!) Wall, - N. Y. Fire Insurance, 72 Wall, - N. Y. Guardian, - - 76 Wall, - North American, - - 52 Wall, - North River, - - - 102 (J'nwich, Pelican Mutual, - - '(35 Wall, - Protection. Hartford,Ct.|72 Wall, - Saratoga Mut.,Sar.Spgs,63 \V^•lll, - SpringGarden. Pliil.. Pa.i49 Fulton, Sun I^Iutual, (F. & M.) 6& 8 Mer.Ex. Trust Fire Insurance, - ,60 Wall, - United States, - - - (i7 Wall, - Washington, Prov., R.I 146 Pine, - Williamsburgh, - - i74 Wall, - fe 100 INSURANCE COMPANIES IN NEWSYORK. tb >.>. 1-5^ ■^ >.t >. -S^S ^Ji m Mi c a lO o , , , o § § O l<9 S tpg^ot 'y ©O E WW to tf} C< -H CO O CO O CO ^ IQ Oi IQ O ■* to I ^£^'^ ^ ^' lO to — << S 0^ S o ^t£T^ -W X -i, 13 =« ^ ^ S c 02 ^- 5 g fJ fJ - . > >. C3 5S =-; ££ g CQ t^ :5 d s; I ^ .2 ^.6 £ SO < < LIFE AND TRUST INS. CO'S.— COLLKCTION OF TAXES. lOl Life and Trust Insurance Companies — Continued. Farwrs' Loan and Trust Co., 50 Wall. D. D. Williamson, Pies. R. K. Delarteld, Sec. $2,000,000 capital. 40,000 shares. $50 par. Div. Jan. and July. Mutual Brn-fiU 11 Wall. Robert L. Patterson, Pres. B. C. Miller, Sec. Josopli L. Lord, Agent. Yearly div's. Matua' J^ifchoWAL Morris llobinson, Pres. Sain'l Hannay, Sec. JSTational L>an, of Lund-on, 74 Wall. J. Leander Starr, Gen. Agent. $2,500,000 capital. Jfauti/us, 58 Wall. J. D. P. 0^'den, Pres. Lewis Benton, Sec. NewEn^/and Mutual, of Boston, 16 WnU. John Hopper, Agent. Uiv. every 5 years. N. Y. Life Lis. iiuenMion«« a,nd Cost of several Hotels. {T/ic Arrangcmimt is .fllphah'lical.) TheJimeriranHotrl, located at 229 Broadway, opposite the Park, is conducted by W. B. Cozzens. It was opened in June, 1838 ; is 71 feet on the front, and 125 feet deep; six stories high, and contains 120 rooms. The dining-room is 64 by 33 feet. Board, $2 per day. 104 DIMENSIONS AND COST OF SEVERAL HOTELS. Astor House, this establishment, conducted by Messrs. Colemnn &. Stetson, is located on Broadway between Barclay and Vesey-streets, and was opened in May, 1836. It is 201 feet on the front and 154 feet deep ; is five stories hi°rh, and contains 308 rooms. The dining-room is 108 by 4i feet ; board, $2 per day. The ground and house cost between $700,000 and .f ^00,000; furniture $120,000. AtheiKBam Hotel, at 347 Broadway, was opened in 1838. It is 30 feet on the front by 150 feet deep; four stories high, and contains 83 rooms. The dining room is 63 by 18 feet. House cost $20,000 ; the furniture $7,000. Price of board, $1 50 per day. Conducted by B. L. Eaton. Atlantic Hotel, located at 5 Broadway, is conducted by W. C. Anderson. It is 95 feet on the front and 180 feet deep ; four stories high, and contains 85 rooms. The dining-room is 75 by 30 feet. House cost $50,000; the furniture, $25,000; price of board, $1 50 per day. Carlton House, located at 350 Broadway, was opened Nov. 1839. It is 60 feet on the front by J75 feet deep ; five stories high, and con- tains 128 rooms. Price of board, S2 per day. Conducted by jMessrs. Benson & Hodges. City Hotel, conducted by Chester Jenings, is located at 133 Broad- way, between Cedar and i'names-streets. It is 101 feet on the front, and 133 feet deep; five stories high, and contains 137 rooms. The gentlemen's dining-room is 86 by 27 feet, and that for the ladies is 45 by 36 feet. Price of board, $2 \wr day. Clinton Hotel, situated in Beekman-street, near the Park, con- ducted by Messrs. Hodges & Blasdel, was opened in 1829; is four siories high, 50 feet on the front, and 104 feet deep. The dining-room is 50 by 26 feet. Price of board, $1 50 per day. Croton Hotel, this house, at 142 Broadway, was opened May 1st, 1843, under the charge of J. L. Moore. It is 110 feet on the front, and 100 feet deep, six stories liigh, and contains 100 rooms. The dining-room is 60 by 28 feet ; price of board, from $1 50 to $2 50 per day. The furniture cost $20,000. Franklin House, located in Broadway, corner of Dey-street ; con- ducted by Messrs. Hayes & Treadwell, was opened May Ist, 1825. It is 75 feet on the front, and 150 feet deep ; five stories high, and contains 140 rooms. Tlie dining-room is 35 by 65 feel. Board $2 per day. The house cost $ 130,000, furniture $35,000. Howard's Hotel, located on the corner of Broadway and Maiden lane, is conducted by Messrs. Thomas & Roe ; was opened in March, 1840, is 161 feet on the front, 130 feet deep, and si.x; stories high. The dining-room is 160 by 30 feet. Price of board, $2 per day. Lovejoy's Hotel, situated on the corner of Park Row and Beek- man-street, IS five stories high, contains 140 rooms, and conducted on the European plan, by Mrs. Lovejoy & G L. Libley. Merchants'' Hotel, situated at 41 Corllandt-street, and conducted by W. Muirhead ; was opened in 1840 ; is 30 feet on the front, and 130 feet deep, five stories high, and contains 75 rooms. The dining- room is 75 by 45 feet. House cost $50,000, the furniture $6000. Price of board, $1,25 per day. National Hotel, at5Cortlandt-st., is conducted by Messrs. C. Wyc- koir & Co. It was opened February, 1845 ; is 40 feet on the front, by 229 feet deep ; six stories high, and contains 140 rooms. House cost $40,000, the furniture $15,000. The dining-room is 75 by 30 feet. Price of board, $1 50 per day. BOARD OF PILOT COMMISSIONERS. 105 J^cw-York Hotel, this establishment, located at 721 Broad- way, vviis built in 1844, and opened in December of that year, by John H. Billinps, the present proprietor. It is 198 feet on the front, and 125 feet deep, six stories high, contains seventy suites of apart- ments and all told, about 200 rooms. The ground and house cost $225,000, the furniture $45,000. The dining room is 85 by 40 feet. Board, per day, $2. Pcarl-strett House, is located at 88 Pearl-street, and conducted by J. M. Flint & Co. It was opened in 1837, is 175 feet long, and 75 feet deep, six stories high, and contains 200 rooms. The dining- room is 95 by 23 feet. The house cost $85,000, the furniture $2(5,000. Price of board, $1 50 per day. Tammany Hall, conducted on "the European plan," by J. W. Howard, is situated on the corner of Nassau & Frankfort streets, and was opened January, 1830. United States Hotel, corner of Water and Fulton-streets, is con- ducted by Henry Johnson. It was opened in 1832, is 100 feet on the front, and 130 feet deep ; seven stories high, contains 225 rooms, cost $350,000, the furniture $75,000. The dining-room is 100 by 60 feet. Price of board. $1 25 per day. Jf ester n Hotel, situated at 9 Cortlandt-street, was opened in 1842. It is 94 feet on the front bv 120 feet deep, five stories high, contains 130 rooms, and cost .$00,000, the furniture $12,000. The dining room is 55 by 55 feet. Price of board, $1 25 per day. Conducted by Messrs. Dwier & Barbour. Board of Pilot Comsiiissioiicrs. Office, \o. 70 Wall. Where applications may be m ide for Pilots between the hours of 9 o'clock A. M. and 3 o'clock P. M. Commis- sioners : Com. Jacob Jone."?, appointed by the Sec. of the Navy ; R. L. Taylor, C. H. Marshall, by the Chamber of Commerce ; Russell Sturgis, (i. W. Blunt, by the Board of Underwriters ; F. Perkins, Sec; J. G. King, Pres. Chamber of Commerce; Abram Ogden, Pres. Board of Underwriters. INWARD PILOTAGE. For every vessel drawing less than 14 feet water, per foot, $2 00 " " 14 feet and lesi than 18 feet, " $2 50 " " " 18 feet and upwards " S3 00 For every armed vessel " $5 GO If boarded out of eight of Sandy Hook Light House, one fourth to the above rates are added. From Nov. 1st to April 1st, four dollars are added to the full pilotage of every vessel drawing ten feet and upwards. OUTWARD PILOTAGE. For every vessel driwing less than 14 feet wafer, per foot, ^1 50 " " " 14 feet and less than 18 feet, " $1 75 " " " 18 feet and upwards " $3 00 For every day's detention $3 00 TRANSPORTATION FROM NORTH TO EAST RIVER, AND VirE VERSA. A 74 gim ship $20 00 I A sloop of war $10 00 A frigate 15 00 | All merchant vessels 5 00 From Quarantine, one quarter of Uie inward pilotage, exclusive of tlie of}' shore. 106 BOARD OF PILOT COMMISSIONERS. Hauling into the River, from the Wharf, S2. Pilot boats holding commissions from this Board, are numbered and designated by a square Burgee with white centre and blue bor- der, the number being in the centre. Ne^v Jersey Comiaiissioners of Pilotag-e. Office 105 South street, or in York street, Jersey City. John F. Ellis, Pres. Wm. G. Hackstalf, of Jersey City ; Wm. T. Rogers, of Am boy ; Lewis Bosvvorth, Benj. Beaston, of Essex county; Law- rence Kearny, of Amboy. Feks. — For piloting between the eastward or southward of the white buoy, and the ports of Jersey City, JVewark, Perth Amboy, or within Sandy Hook. Vessels drawing less than 14 feet, per foot, $2 00 between 14 and 18 feet, " 2 50 " " more than 18 feet, " 3 00 Vessels of War. " 5 00 Vessels taken charge of to the westward of the white buoy, half pilotage. If boarded out of sight of Sandy Hook Light House, one quarter to the above rates to be added. Between the first days of November and April, in addition to the above, for vessels drawing ten feet and upwards, four dollars, less than ten feet, two dollars; and onehalf of these additional sums for half pilotage. Commissioners' fees not charged. Hurl-Gate I»ilots. Offices 24 Coenties Slip, and corner Pike and South. FEES. per foot. From or to Sand's Point, for schooners or sloops, $1 50 " " " Square-rigged vessels, 1 75 From or to Hurl-Gate, for schooners or sloops, 1 00 " " '* Squaie-rigged vessels, 1 25 From the 1st of November to the 1st of April, in addition to the above, for every ship, bark or brig, 2 00 For every schooner or sloop, 1 00 Bispeiisaries. J^ew-York City, 113 White street, corner of Centre. Eastern, Ludlow-street, corner of Essex Market place. JVorthcrn, Waverley place, corner of Christopher street. Gardens. Atlantic, 11 Broadway. Castle, French &. Heiser, Battery. J\rcw- York, John H. Contoit, 353 Broadway. JV/6/o's, 576 Broadway. Tivo/i Saloon and Gartiens, Char! ton-Street, corner of Varick. Vaiixhall, Bradford Jones, 408 Bowery. Harbor Masters. Office, 179 Water street. Abraham Turnure, Charles Mills, James B. Nicholson and Jonathan D. Wilson. FERRIES, MARKETS, ETC. 107 Ferries. Astoria, called H^ll Gate Ferry, from the foot of 80th St., E River. Fulton Firry, from Fulton-street, New-York, to Fulton st., Brook- lyn. (731 yards wide.) South FfT-ry, from Whitehall street, near the Battery, East River, to Atlanlic-itreet, Brooklyn. (i:5U0 yards wide.) Catharine Ferry, trom Catharine-st., N. Y. to Main-st., Brooklyn. (736 yards wide.) JVavi/ Yard Ferry, from Walnut St., N. Y. to Jackson-st., Brook- lyn. (707 yards wide.) Elizabethport. — This Ferry, which lands also at Port Richmond, once a day, starts from foot of Battery pi. near the Battery, N. E. Fort Lee, from the foot of Canal-street. Hobokcn, from the foot of Barclay, Canal, and Christopher-streets. Jersey City, from the foot of Corilandt-street. (1795 yards wide.) JVew Brighton, see Statcn Island. Staten Is/and. — The Ferry which lands at the Quarantine, and at the lower lanihng, or Sailors' Retreat, on the east side of the Is- land, starts from the foot of Whitehall-street, near the Battery. The F'erry to the north side, of the Island, and which lands at New Brighton, Sailors' Snug Harbor, Castleton and Port Richmond, starts from the foot of Battery place, near the Battery, Norih River. fVUliavisburg, from the foot of Peck Slip, (-2800 yards;) also, from tlie foot of Grand St., (950 yards,) and from the foot of Houston-st. Markets. Catharine, Catharine Slip, Cherry to Soulh-st. Centre, Centre-street, Grand to Broome. Chelsea, Avenue 9, near Eighteenth st. Clinton, Washington and West-streets, bet. Spring and Canal. Essex, Grand street, Essex to Ludlow. F'ulton, South-street, between Fullon and Beekman. Frank/ in, Old Slip. Oovvernrur, Gouverneur Street, corner of Water. Greenwich, Weehawken-street, corner of Christopher and West. Jefferson, Av. 6, corner of Greenwich A v. Monroe, Corlaers-street, between Monroe and Grand. Manhattan, Houston-street, corner of First. Tomjj/iins, Avenue 3, between Sixth and Seventh-streets. Union, Second street, corner of Houston. fVashinn-tun, Washington street, corner of Vesey and Fulton, N. R. Board of Health. The Board of Health consists of the Mayor, Aldermen, and Assist- ant Aldermrn, (seven members, \\ ith the Mayor, constituting a quorum.) The odicers are: Hon. Wm. T. Havemevt-r, (Mayor,) President, 5 City Hall, li. 93 Vandnm ; 1). T. Valentine, (Clerk C. C.) Sec, 8 City Hall ; John Ewen, (compt.,) Treas., 5 Hall of Records. Koard of Ilealtli Commissioners. Composed of Officers appointed by the State Government. The following are the officers :— Henry Van Eloevenhergh, Health Officer, Quarantine; Alex. F. Vache, Resident Phy.eici.m, 29 Chambers; S. R. Harris, Health Commissioner, 3 Stone; Henry Pattison, Agent and Secretary, 121bt st., Harlem. 108 FOREIGN CONSUIiS, RESIDE. \T IN NEW YORK CITY. (Marked thus, * were burnt out by the Great Fire, July 19th, 1845, and many of whom, will probably return to their former locations when rebuilt.) COUNTRY. NAME. OFFICE. Austria, . . . Rocco Martuscelli, 79 Greenwich. Baden, . . , J. W. Schmidt,* 165 Water. Bavaria, . . . George H. Siemon, 78 Maiden L. Belffium I Henry W. T. Mali,* 24 Pine. Belgium, . • I H. Mali, Vice Consul,* .... 24 Pine. R-„„;, < Louis H. F. DeAguiar, Consul Gen. 34 Piatt. orazu, . . I Louis F. Defiganiere, V. Consul, 34 Piatt. Bremen, . • . Herman Oelrichs,* 9 Broad. Brunswick, . . John D. Kleudgen,* 78 Water. Chili, .... Franklin H. Delano, 78 South. Denmark, . • Edward Bech 69 West. PrnnPA i Charlcs Delaforest 93 Greenwich. r ranee, . . ) Louis Borg, V. Consul, . . . . 93 Greenwich. Frankfort, . , Frederick Wissnian, 23 S. William. Great Britain, . Anthony Barclay, 30 Meich. Ex. Greece, . . . Eugene Dutilh, 23 S. William. Hamburgh. . . J. VV. Schmidt,* 165 Water. Hanover, . . . Lewis H. Meyer, 9 Broad. "G?and''Sy1f;S^"t'^«"y««"«™^"".*^ • ' 156 Broadway. Hessian, . . . Conrad W. Faber,* 93 Pearl. Lubec, .... George W. Kruger,* 9 Broad. Mecklenburgh, . Charles A. Heckscher, .... 44 South, vr - J John Granja, Consul General, . 95 Wall, iviexico, . . ^ j^^^jij^ p, Hargous, V. Consul, . 33 South. Tvtr.^f.,rA,,^ i John L. Darby 31 Old slip. Montevideo,. | g. F. Darby, V. Consul, . . . 49 South.^ Nassau, . . . William A. Kobbe, 5 Pearl. Netherlands, . John C. Zimmerman,* .... 13 Bioad. \orway, . . . C. Edward Habicht, 85 West. New Grenada, . Mortimer Livingston, V. Consul, 22 Broad. Portugal,. . . Philip N. Searle,* V. Consul, . 149 Cedar. Prussia, , . . J. W. Schmidt,* 165 Water. Roman States, . Martin Mantin 32 Piatt. P . ) Alexis Eustaphieve, Consul Gen. 407 Fourth. Kusbia, . . ^ George E. Kunhardt, acthig V. C. 69 West. Sardinia, . . . Lnuis Mossi, Consul General, . 522 Broome. Saxe Altenburg, Carl Hinrichs, 183 Pearl. Saxe Weimar, . Edward Stucken, 9 Broad. Saxony, . . . John R. Mahler, 96 Pearl. Sicilies (the Two) Rocco Martuscelli, 79 Greenwich. Spain Francisco Stoughton, .... 115 Leonard. Sweden, . . . C. Edward Habicht, 85 West. Switzerland, . Louis P. de Luze,* I New. Texas, .... John H. Brower, 91 Front. Tuscany, , . . William H. Aspinwall, V. Consul, 55 South. Venezuela, . . John B. Purroy, 11 Wall. 109 RATES OF PARE HACKNEY COACHES, CARRIAGES, OR CABS. 1. For conveying a passenger any distance not exceeding one mile, 25 cents ; two passengers, fiO cents, or2o cents eacli ; every additional passenger, 'J6 cents. 2. For a pas.-^enger any distance exceeding a mile, and wiiiiin two miles, 60 cents ; every additional passenger, 25 cents. 3. For one passt-nger lo the New Alms House, 50 certs ; returning, 50 cents ; for two passengers, 75 cents (or the two , and 25 cents going, and 26 cents re- turning, for every additional passenger. 4. For one passenger to •I'id St.. remaining half an hour and returning, one dollar ; every additional passenger, 25 cents. f>. For one passenger to 61st St., remaining three quarters of an hnur and re- turning, one dollar and 50 cents; every additional passenger, 37 1-2 cents. 6. For one passenger to 66th St.. remaining an hour and returning, two dollars ; every additional passenger, 50 cents. 7. For one or more passengers to Harlem, and returning, ■with the privilege of remaining three hours, four dollars. 8. For one or more ptssengers to Kingsbridge, and returning, with the privilege of keeping the Carriage or Cab all day, five dollars. 9. For the use of a Hackney Coach, Carriage, or Cab, by the day, with one or more passengers, five dollars. 10. For the use of a Hackney Coach, Carriage, or Cab, by the hour, with one or more passengers, with the privilege of going from place to place, and of stop- ping as often as may be required, as follows, viz. : — first hour, one dollar; second hour, 75 cents ; every succeeding hour, 50 cents. 11. For children between 2 and 14 years of age, half price only ; for children under 2 years of age, no charge. 12. Whenever a Hackney Coach, Carriage, or Cab, shall be detained, excepting as aforesaid, the owner or driver shall be allowed after the rate of 75 cents for an hour, 37 12 cents for each and ev«ry Rubsequeiit hour, and soon in proportion for any part of the first and subsequent hour. 13. For attending a funeral within the Lamp and Watch District, two dollars; the Potter's Field, three dollars; which charge shall include for the necessary detention and returning with passengers. 14. Every c^ver or owner of a Hackney Coach, &c., shall carry, in and upon his Coach, Cariiage, or Cab, in addition to the person or persons therein, one trunk, valise, saddle bag, carpet bag, portmanteau, or box, if he be requested so to do, for each passenger, without charge ; but for every trunk or other such articles above named, more than one for each passenger, he shall be entitled to the sum of six tents. 2. In case of disagreement as to distance or price, to be determined by the Mayor, or Superintendent of Hackney Coaches. 3. The owner of any Hackney Coach, &c., shall not receive any pay for the conveyance of any passenger, unless the number of the carriage and the rates and prices of fare .shall be placed in a manner hereinafter directed by section fifth. 4. The owner or driver of any Hackney Coach, Carriage, or Cab, shall not be entitled to recover any pay from any person from whom he shall have demanded any greater price of rates than authorized to receive. 5. Upon the trial of any ;e and Pipe Clay . . . ""33 Barilla if in Bales ""88 For Cables other than Chain . . . " " -20 '15 Chain Cables, Rigging, old Junk & Sassafras I Root " " 10 jlO Cork Wood, Cork, Rnttans,Loose Deer Skins, " " j Moss, Oakum, Peltries and Wool . . " " 12J :12i Cassia in Mats " " ^8 18 in Boxes per box. 6 6 Cinnamon, Cloves, Nutmegs, Loose Twine, Brasclletto Wood, Caro Wood &. Cannon per 100 lbs. 6 Loose Cheese " " |6 Cheese in Casks per cask. 16 Iron Castings per 100 lbs. 2 Old Copper, Brass, Lead, Loose Scrap Iron, Hollow Ware, Mace, Ivory, Verdigris and Whalebone ..-..."" 10 Camphor, Grindstones, Twine, Brass and Cop- per in Sheets and Cases . . . . " Candles and Cheese, in Boxes, Butter and Lard 1 in Kegs, Tobacco in Bales or Ceroons . per packaged Currants in Kegs & Bread and Flour in Barrels " " j() Cotton if under 25 Bales per bale. if over 25 do 41 n Fish if loose per 100 lbs. if in Casks " " Figs in Drums, or Boxes, Rasins and other Fruit, Iron Wire, Hams and Bacon . " " Indigo and Cochineal in Boxes . . . " " do. do. in Ceroons . . . " " Nicaragua Wood a u Pepper, Pimento and Coffee in Bags . . " " Pig Iron and Lead n .t Rice in Tierces per tierce. in Half Tierces half tierce Brazil Sugar if in Boxes per 100 lbs Teas in whole Chests per chest. in Half Chests or Quarter . . . " " Tobacco in hhds per hhd. I Hempen Yarn in Rolls per roll. ■All other articles not heretofore enumerated per 100 lbs. ^2 ] If the fees do not exceed S5, the Weigher may charge 1 cent per I lOOIbs. additional. If the fees do not amount to one dollar, the ! Weigher may charge the dollar. I Thes(; rates may lie varied from, at limes, by transient Weighers, but all the City and State Weighers of standing, adhere strictly to the above Tariff. 10 8 8 8 8 8 2 2 5 5 12i 10 10 8 4 4 3 2 2 2 10 Q 6 6 3 5 12^ 4 4 4 25 25 20 20 2 2 112 Hates or Prices of Cartag-e. Tlie Law applicable to Carts and Cartmen, Section I.— The prices or rates to be taken by Cartmen for the loading, carrying, and unloading of goods, wares, merchandize, and other things, shall be as follows, to wit : — Ale or beer, every hogshead from sixty to ninety gallons, $0 31J Alum or copperas, every hogshead from twelve to fifteen hundred weight, -------------0 38| Alum or copperas, every hogshead over one ton weight, - 70 Bread, every four tierces, ------------0 31^ Bricks, every load, --------------0 3l|- Bricks, every load handed and piled, -------- 38| Boards, plank and scantling, or other timber, every load, - 311 Beef or Pork, every five barrels, --------- 3l| Cables, half-shot, fiom five to seven inches in circumference, 38f Cables, whole-shot, from five to seven inches in circum- ference, ----------------0 78^ Cables, half-shot, from seven to ten inches in circumference, 93| Cables, whole-shot, from seven to ten inches in circum- ference, ----------------1 87^ Cables, whole-shot, often, and not exceeding twelve inches in circumference, -------------2 18f Cables, whole-shot, of twelve, and not exceeding fourteen inches in circumference, ---------_3 12| Cables, half-shot, of the two last preceding dimensions, - 1 56j Cables, half-shot, of fourteen, and not exceeding fifteen inches in circumference, .---------1 87^ Cables, whole-shot, of fourteen, and not exceeding fifteen inches in circumference, ----------3 75 Cables, half-shot, of above fifteen inches in circumference, 2 50 Cables, whole-shot, ofabove fifteen inches in circumference, 5 00 Calves, sheep, lambs, every load, ---------0 38| Cider, cheese, cocoa, every load, ---------0 31J Clay, or sand, every twelve bushels, --------0 3l| Coal, every half chaldron or half ton, ------- 38| Coffee, in bags or barrels, every load, ----..--0 31i Coffee, every hogshead over one thousand weight, - - - 38^ Cordage, small, every load, -----------0 31^ Cotton, eveiy three bales, -.---..-----0 31i Dry wood, every load, ----------.--0 31+ Earthenware, (loose,) every load, ---------0 38| European goods, every load, -----------0 31i Firewood, every load, -------------0 3U Fish, dried, (loose,) everj^ load, ----------0 38| Flaxseed, every three tierces, ----------0 3U Flour, every twelve bags, or seven barrels, ------ 38| Furniture, household, and housing, every load, - - - - 93| Gammon, or hams, every load, ----------0 31|^ Hay, in bales, bundles, or trusses, every load, ----- 38^ Hay, (loose,) every load, ------------0 93f Heading, or staves, every load, ----------0 31^ Hemp, in bales or bundles, every load, -------0 38f Hemp, (loose,) every twelve hundred weight, ----- G2i Hides, every fifty, ---------- ---.0 38f Hoops, in bundles, every load, ----------o 31^ Ii3 -.iSi . -m ^■m . ()47| 38; RATKS OK PRICES OK CARTA CJE. Hoo}) polos, every load, ---------- Iron, hol!o\v-ware, every load, -------- Iron, hiir, every load, ------------- Leather, sole, every one hundred side.s, ------- Mohisses, every hogshead, from sixty to ninety ciallnns, Molasses, every hogshead, from ninety to one hundred and forty gallons, .-------------0 5.'> Oil, every three barrels, ------------0 31^ Oysters, oyster-shells, or pantiles, every load, - - - - - 38| Paints or whiting, every hogshead, from twelve to fifteen humired weight, -------------0 3S| Paints, or whiting, over one ton weight, -------0 70 Paints, whiting, or pimento, every load, -------0 31|^ Plaster of Paris, every ton, -----------0 fi'Ji PoUvsh, every three barrels, --0 31^^ Rum, every hogshead, -------------0 47 Salt, every twenty bushels, - -03l| Shingles, in bundles, long cedar or pine, every load, - - 31 Shingles, cypress, twenty-two inches, every two thousand, 47 Stone, paving or building, every load, ------- 31^ Stone, cut, every load, ------------0 38^ Sugar, Havana, every three boxes, --------0 'M\ Sugar, every hogshead, from nine to fifteen hundred weight, 38f Sugar, every hogshead, over one ton weight, - - - - 70 Tar, pitch, or turpentine, every five barrels, ----- 31^ Tea, every load, ---------------0 38^ Tiles, or slates, every load, ------0 38^ Tobacco, every common hogshead, ---.----0 38i Tobacco, every hogshead over one ton weight, - - - - 70 Wheat, or other grain, every load, ---------0 31^ Wine, gin, or brandy, every pipe over one hundred gallons, 47 Wine, every four quarter casks, ---------0 47 And for every load of goods, wares, merchandize, or other things not above enumerated, ---------0 31^ % 2. In all cases where the distance exceeds half a mile, and does not exceed two miles, the cartman shall be entitled to receive one-third more for every load of the same article, for every addi- tional half mile he shall cart or transport them. % 3. If any cartman shall ask, demand, receive, take, exact, or extort any greater rate or rates, price or prices, or compensation, for carting or transporting any goods, wares, merchandize, firewood, or other things, than is mentioned, exi)ressed, and limited in the provisions of this title, he shall forfeit and pay the sum of five dol lars for every such otience. % 4. If any cartman shall ask or demand any greater rate or price than is al)ove j)rovided and allowed, for the transportation of any goods, wares, or merrhandi/.c, he shall not be entitled to receive any compensation for any such services. % .'). IVo cartman shall neizlect or refuse to cart, or employ his horse and cart, or sled, in the transportation of any articles what ever, when required, unless he be then actually otherwise em ployed, or unless the distance he shall be required to go shall be uKiro than four miU^s from the City Hull, under a penalty of five [dollars for every such olfencr 114 OMNIBUS LINES IN NEW-YORK. •ll 00 § § § o § S o l« i §,1 S § r-l l> gl g § <5 ^1 ^mWlriP l| P'^ CCS c"^ c>3S--?--o-" -i^ ^ ^ g = 3 i-^lg^ 2i<=-^5= $^:fi--l^ I'^.S^S sS^fl Sa2 s: E p - = S^ .^ ia-^l^ = £- si:- sajS hi: £ £ i^ ^^ cZ t^ fa OMNinr S AND STAGE LINES IN NEW YORK 115 4 o .1 c H 6 CJ o s W O « P3 Cr-- « ^ r. S ="- o o o § .;fe 1 1— I au c M 1 = fcl o s § IS" 5 « CO « *;4 *3 ® = £ ?, . ^ . S ^ XI . £ ^ !» cS « .ti o - ^ - OS i:cci^~ .= >'.<^ _ c d: ^ ^ c i *t o - Ei 5 >. O _-=' > — <" Cl j; 1 lO'SPa c£c^ c-5o> £H ? r] 1^ T O H O ^ ^ cid i-l ^ &4 ^ rt S t> a f — i: -^a x.% 6 s^iii o u = ;0«; hi. t.'i=i? ^ S^ e :S - ?J 5 55 SEh cI; the finest specimens of Eunipean skill. Tiie intelligent observer of our progress in the household arts, will derive no ordinary gratification from a visit to the Depot of Messrs. Coutliouy & Nevers. DisBRow's Eqi-estrian Atademy. — There is no place about town where the " utile et (hilce " are so splendidly blended as at Disbrovv's Equestrian Academy in the Bowery, near Vauxhall Garden. The comforts and convenience of the m megc — the politeness and skill of the proprietor and instructor — the fine horses and moderate charges, conspire to render that establishment well worthy the patronage of the enlightened citizens of New Vork. Horsemanship is becoming a necessary accomplishment for both ladies and gentlemen; and as I it is an art which requires a competent instructor, we can confidently I recommend Mr. VVm. fl. Disbrovv as a gentlein m pre-eminently I qualified as a teacher. Thoroughly acquainted with the disposition I and management of the horse, and being himself one of the most i graceful riders in the citv, persons placing themselves under his I tuition cannot fail receiving a proper knowledge of the art. I To ladies this establishment affords peculiar advantages, as they I are concealed from public gaze while under instruction, and because ; no possible danger can be apprehended. Mr. D. lias horses which he i has trained especially for the, use of his lady pupils.— We feel con- fident that the advantages of this pleasant place of exercise and amusement need only to be known, and it will receive a present share of public patronage. As the Academy is open to ladies and gentlemen, the former in the j forenoon, the latter in the afternoon, we would advise ail to visit it and judge for themselves. Printing Press, Machine, and Saw Manufactory. — We have h.id the pleasure; of visiting the celebrated establishments of Messrs. Hoe & Co., located :a'i[) and 31 Gf)ld-strcet, and at the corner of Brooms and .Sheriffstreets, and many new and gratifying reflections hnve been suggested thereby, connected with the history of the Mechanic Arts in the United States. " The never-ending — still beginning" clink of hammers — the roar of furnaces and blowers there to be lieard — still linger on our ear. What a life those sons of Vulcan lead amid the din of artificial thunders — the very variety of which is monotonous! A visit to such an establishment afl^)rds, to the reflecting mind, the most satisfactory proofs of the ra|iid ad- vance of American skill in manufactures. With this est;iblishm!'nt, editors and publishers of newspipers throughout the United State.s are f imiliar. It is not devoted, however, exclusively to the manu- factiiie of machine and hand presses — but every tiling necessary for a printing office and bindery, including type, ink, &c., is furnished at the shortest notice, and at a cost much less than fi)rmerly. Ma- chinery of every description is manufactured by the Messrs. Hoe, with an expedition ami in a style of finish unsurpassed by any simi- lar establishment in the United Stales. But to ap|)reciate Justly the degree of perfection which they have reached in the manufacture of printing midlines, printing and standing presses, hydraulic and screw presses, saw-mills, veneer saws ; circular, pit, mill, cross cut, and other saws— and macliinery generally— the reader must visit 113 CELEBRATED ESTABLISHMENTS IN NEW-YORK. their establishment, which will well reward the curious in such matters. Plumee National Daguerrian Gallery and PnoTOGRArnic Depots. (Founded A. D. 1840.) To which have been awarded eight Medals and Premiums by the Institutes of Magsachusetts, New- York, Pennsylvania and Ohio, for the most beautiful colored Da- guerreotypes and best Apparatus ever exhibited. This estabhshment is l()c;tit'(! :it No. 2.51 liioadway, upper corner of Murray-street, (next door aljii\i- T(iiim>'s jewelry store.) And Hie lM;;i!rlies are at the following places: Po?ton, 75 Court St.; Pliilad ■Ipliia, 136 Chesnut St.; Baltimore, 22 Baltimore st. ; Washington City, Pennsylvania Avenue ; Alexandria, D. C, Lyceum Hall ; New Orleans, 5(j Canal st. : Snratogn Springs, Broadway ; Paris, 127 Vkille P.ue du Temple; Petersliurgh, Va., Sycamore St.; Cinciiuiiiti, (J.. 170 Main st. ; Li iii-vilie, K.\-., 4'19 Main'st. ; Lexing- ton, Ky., Main st. : Harrodsbuig, Ky., ilarrodsburg Springs; St. Louis, Mo., corner Fourth' and Chesnut sts. ; DuBuque, Iowa ; Liverpool, 32 Church st. This immense Establishment is justly celebrated as the First in the World, and such is the magnitude of its business, induced by the superiority of its productions, that it furnishes employment and sup- port to upwards of 500 individnals. The Manuf'.cturing Department is conducted upon an immense scale, to supply tiic very Inraje consumption of the Picture Depart- ment of the concern, and to fill the mitaerous orders from all partsof the world, for Apparatus, Plates, Cases, Chemicals, &c. The Gallery here, is one of the most attractive and interesting places of fashionable public resort in New-York ; and an honor to the City. being Free, and occupying tl:e first floor above the street, it istlic pleasantest lounge in Broadway ; and is daily frequented by the elite, who find this an agreeable resting place in passing up and down the gay thoroughfare. It contains a vast collection of the most perfect and choice sped mens of the beautiful art of Photograph)', ever produced. Among them are Likenesses of many of the most distinguished individuals of the country ; Presidents, Vice Presidents, Officers of the Cabinet, Army, Navy, &c.. Senators, Members of Congress. Judges, Divines, Lawyers, Authors, Actors, Municipal Officers of this city, and a host of others " too numerous to mention." Above the Gallery are numerous suites of Eooms, appropriated to the use of sitters ; who are thus secured the advantages of privacy and despatch in liaving tlieir portraits executed. There is one suite of rooms in this establishment fitted up to take groups of fifty persons or more in one picture, each being in the same light as the other, and so arranged as to remove entirely the dis- agreeable effi;ct of the light upon the rye, as at no time does the sun shine into this part of the building — the soft northern liglit only being admitted through the roof, a mode of obtaining it which from ex- periment, proves to be the only way in which a laige group can be made by this art. Fancy and Curiosity Store. — In alluding to the various estab- lishments which stand preeminent in our " Great Rietropolis," those that are not only a source of profit and honor to their pioprietors, but also, the pride and boast of our citizens; the Fancy and Cuii- CELEBRATED ESTABLISHME.MTS IN NEW-YOKK. 119 osity Store of Messrs. Tiirmy, Yoiinir and EllirJ, occupying Xos. 259 and St'iO Broadway, opposite tlie City Ilall, deserves p irlicular atten- tion. Here all tastes anslrich to the hun- dred kinds of Humming Birds ; from the Bird u '^aradise of the Tropics, to the Penguins of the Polar Regions. Tlie specimens of Preserved Animals and Reptiles are v'* ""emark- able excellence, such as were never seen alive, in this country. The departments of Conchology, Entomology and Mineralogy, are very perfect. The collection of Indian and Polynesian Implements, War Clubs, Idols, &c. is very curious, interesting and valuable. The Grand Cosmorama contains views of the most celebrated Cities, Scenery and J\atural Phenomena, executed at an immense expense, ty the first Artists in Europe. The Miscellaneous Curiosities, include a fine collection of Old Paintings and Rare Engravings, many Chinese Curiosities, ancient Suits of Armor, Mail and Arms, antique Coins, splendid Fossils, beautiful Statuary, a finely preserved Egyp- tian Jlummy, &c. A Saloon capable of seating over one thousand persons at a time lias recently been added to the Museum, and a great variety of the most amusing, and perfectly chaste performances take place there- in every evening, (except Sundays,) in the year. The price of ad- mission to the whole is only 25 cts. AMERICAN ART UNION. American Art Union, 322 Broadway. The amount received from those who contribute $5 per annum, is appropriated to the purchase of paintings by American Artists, which are disposed of annually by lottery, among the subscribers. Ofiicers.— W. C. Bryant, Pres.; Andrew Warner, R.F. Eraser, Sees. ; Eben Piatt, Treas. BOWERY THEATRE, Is situated hi the Bowery, above Bayard street. (TJie particulars respecting it have not been obtained) CASTLE GARDEN i Is built on a mole, and connected with the Battery by a bridge. It was originally erected as a fortification, and having become un- necessary for this purpose, was ceded by the United States to the ( corporation of the city in 1823. Within its walls, ] 0,000 peo))le can j be accommodated in a great amphitheatre ; it is used ifor exhibitions, and sometimes for public meetings. CHATHAM THEATRE. This theatre is situated on Chatham-street, near the corner of Roosevelt, and almost opposite Orange-street. The great success it has met with under the management of the present lessees, Messrs. Deverna & De Bar, has given it the exceedingly popular cognomen of " Tlie People's Theatre." The house is nearly as large as the PLACES OF AMUSEMENT. 1/81 Park Theatre,— lias three capacious tiers of boxes, and a roomy pit, j into which over 1,000 persons can be comfortably sealed. The style I in which the house is decorated is exceedingly tasteful and elegant; and the manner in which it is conducted is delightful in the extreme. We Bjay safely say, that good order always prevails, and tiiai a strong police force is ever in attendance to protect and be of service to the unwary stranger. The stage department is as well managed as the front. The performers are selected from the most talented in the States. Among the Chatham favourites are George Hill, fa- miliarly called '• Yankee Hill," T. D. Rice, the original "Jim Crow," and J. B. Booth, the famous tragedian. The eniertainments gene- rally consist of choice equestrian and other melo-dramas, with farces, and a variety of dancing and iimsical belween-piece perform- ances. !n short, for beautiful scenery, choice acting, capital music, and comfort for the visitor, the Chatliam, or People's Theatre, is second to no other dramatic temple in the United States. The prices of admission are reasonable enough, viz. — boxes, 25 cents; pit, one shilling. A privat, cents. Open daily. Officers .—Jonathan Sturges, Pns. ; F. W. Edmonds, f^. Pres. ; Tho8. H. Faile, Trcas. ; Wm. H. Johnson, Ser. 133 PLACES OF AMUSEMENT. — STATE ANB CITY COURTS. NIBLQ'S (JARDEN, Situated on the corner of Broadway and Prinee streets, is laid out with eseeediiag taste, and always the very pattern of neatness, hav- ing walks lined with choice flowers and shrubbery; an elegant Saloon, adorned with chaste and beautiful designs, mirrors, &c. ; grounds, too, oraamenteong Island railroad, from the South Feriy to Brooklyn, at the foot of Whitehall. 126 STEAMBOAT LINKS — DISTANCES. ^ Tarrytown, Pier 27 N. R., foot of Chambers street. Trenton, by New Jersey railroad, Pier 16 N. R., foot of Cortlandt|| stieet. Troy (morning and evening), foot of Barclay street, N. R., andll Pier 18 N. R., foot of Cortlandt street. Troy and Albany (evening), from Pier 18 N. R., foot of Cortlandt|| street. West Point, CaldweWs and Cold Spring, foot of Warren street, || N. R. Yonkers, Pier 27 N. R. foot of Chambers street. Distances in tlie City of New York. FROM THE FROM THE FROM THE TO BATTERY. EXCHANGE CITY HALL imile Rector street. 1 j Fulton. I Warren. 1* 1 Leonard. H 1* Canal. \l 1* 1^ Spring. i| 1* Houston. 2 1* w Fourth. 2i Ninth. 2| 1 ll Fourteenth. 2| 2 Seventeenth. 3 2j 2. 2I Twenty-fourth. 1 3 Twenty-ninth. 3- 3^ Thirty-fourth. 3 Thirty-eighth. 4* 3- =1 Forty-fourth. 4| 4 Forty-ninth. 4i 4i 3^ Fifty-fourth. Fifty-eighth. 5 4i 1 Sixty-third. 5i 5 Sixty-eighth. 5i 5- 5? 4| Seventy-third. 53 5? 5 Seventy-eighth. 6 i Eighty-third. 6i 6 Eighty-eighth. 63 8 H Ninety-third. 65 6 Ninety-seventh. 7 6| 6? One Hundred and Second. 51 7 (3^ One Hundred and Seventh. a 6? One Hundred and Twelfth. 7f 7 One Hundred and Seventeenth. 8 7| 7- One Hundred and Twenty-first. 8i 8 7.. One Hundred and Twenty-sixth. 8i 8* 8^ 7- One Hundred and Thirty-first. 8| 8 One Hundred and Thirty-sixth. 9 8? Si One Hundred and Fortieth. a 9 sl One Hundred and Forty-fifth. % 8| One Hundred and Fiftieth. '^ 9| U 9 One Hundred and Fifty-fifth. 1 Tares allowed 1>y Custom. Alum in bngs 5 lbs in casks lOpr. c Almonds in cases 8j)r. c in bales t^ lbs double bales 16 lbs jn bags 4 Cheese in casks or tubs — 15 Cocoa in seroons 8 Copjjeras m casks. . Cassia in boxes. .. . . in mats Cinnamon in box^. in bales- . 10 .actual 6 . actual Cloves in casks 12 in bags 4 Currants in casks 12 in boxes ,16 Fige in boxes 10 in mats or frails 4 in drums 8^^ in casks - 12 [ ^ Glue in casks 20 in boxes 15 Jlenip in bales 5 Indigo in cases 15 Lead i^wbite in oil) kegs 8 Do. do. if the kegs are pack- ed in hhds. iOO lbs. extra is allov/ed f(jr tUe liogsliead. Lead (white dry) in casks. .6 (red dry) in casks 5 (red in oil) do 10 Lead in casks 3 Nails ijn bags ,3 JN utmegs in casks 12 137 Vutnictrsin bags-- :)clire (in oil) in casks 12 j. ~ (dry) do. 10 J * 'owdcr, iGim, in qr. cks 5"l hatlcitsks 9 i-^ whole do,. ..^ j " .^1 urns in boxes 8] ;'ruiies in Iwxes t'aris vvliite in casks llasins in jars in boxes in casks in frails in drums.... aice ■?nuffin boxes 15 5Ugar Candy in tubs 15 ^ Sugar in loaves • • 1 i I Steel per bundle 3 lbs Sumac, no tare : sometimes 1 lb per bag is allowed. ■Sheet iron in casks 15" Steel in cases and casks. ... .6 Spikes in casks .8 — in bags 3 Tallow in bales ...8 in casks 12 in seroons 8 in tubs 15 .lojl .J8 lbs. ■••4 i ..10 ). ..10 Twine in hoxes 15 in casks -.12 inhales 3 Tobacco in boxes 15 W^ire in casks ..8 Whiting in casks 10 ^HCr Actual Tare is a'llovved on Fruit, if required. Tares allowed by tjVLW Od Candles in boxes 8" Cheese in iiamps. orbks... .10 Do. in boxes .20 Chocolate io boxes. .- 10 Cofleem bags 2 in bales 3 in casks-. 12 Cocoa in bags 1 in casks..- 4 Cotton in hales 2 in seroons.. 6 ...10 ;:iill gar in mats or bags.. jSalts, Glaul)er Sugar C.uidy in boxes- |So:ip in boxes -.10 Shot in casks 3 Every whole chest of Bo- 1 heaTea - 70 ■ half 36 \\ quarter • 20 Every chest of Hyson or L other (Jr>!en Tea, of 701 bs. or upwards 20 Every box of other Tea be- ! tween 50 and7ilibs 18 Every box of other Tea, if : 8Ulbs 20 Do. do if from 8;)Ibs. and I upward.^ 22 Indigo in seroons. •-. Nails in casks a ■Pimento in bags 3 Pepper in bag.-*. 2 Siigiir, other than loaf sugar, in casks 12 Sugar in bt.'xes 15 The above to include ropes,'canvas3, and other coverings. — On all other bo-xes of teas, according to the invoice or actual weight thereof. 138 SHERIFF AND DEPUTY SHERIFFS OF THE tITY AND COUNTY OF NEW-YORX. Offi.ce, 21 City IlaU. William Jones, Sheriff, residence, 310 Bowery. T. R. McDonough, Under Sheriff, residence, 71 Orchard. DEPUTIES. Jonathan W. Alien, 157 Spring, Abner Sanford, 183 Laurens, John Gray, 10 E. Twenty- Srst, • Eenry C. Scott, 375 Madison, Isaac Kip, 8-2 Watts, Wi!!i:im H. Sparks, 118 Leonard, William W. Lyon, 15 Attorney, Frederick L. Vultee, 84 Walker, Tiios. P. Peers, 87 Murray, Josopli Weed, 96 Division, James n Prnkney, 05 Allen, F. W. Wiiliiiins, 50 King. Amos Jones. Sheriff's ^Sffent, 44 Mulberry street. Richard S. Jones, Sheriffs Clerk. James J. Bevins, Jailor, 22 Eldridge sL^eet. Owen W. Brennan, Special Deyiity to convey prisoners to Sing Sing, 13 Elm. Academy of the Sacred Heart, Jil Bleeeker. Agency New .Jersey floor oil cloili factory, 182 FronJ. Agentur der Deutschen Geselisehaft, lO.'yFuIrdn. Albany a'.ui Troy stenmboats, office &5 Barclay, Allaire Works, 464 Cherry. Almshouse, Bellevue, foot of Twenty-sixth street. E. R. American Art Union (late Apollo Association,) 32-2 Broadvyay. American Fur Company, rear 39 Ann. American Institute, west wing l^f^w City HalJ. American Land Company, 2(j Nassau street. Apalaehieola Land Office, 13 Wall. ApoUo Association (now Ameriean Art Union,} 322 Broadway. Apollo Saloon, 412 Bro.-idway. Ap}>rentices' I^iiirary, 32 Crosby. Arsenal (New- York State,) Franklin corner Eha. Artillery Drill Rooms, Centre market. Centre corner Grand. Atlantic Dock Company, 8 Wall, capit.-i! $1,000,000. Jaaies De Peyster Ogden, Pres.; D;iniel Rrcliards, Sec. Balance Floating Dock, foot Jefferson, E. R. Ballast Masters, William E. Bertran and Sates, 57 Soiitb.. BHmont Laboratory, 53 and 55 Prince. Bellevue, foot Twenty-sixth, E. R. Board of Brokers, 91 Merchants' Exchange. Board of Education, 2 City Hali, basement. Board of Underwriters, Abm. Ogden. Pres. ; S Baldwin, Sec., office rear 70 Wall. Brooklyn White Lead Company, ISO Front. Butchers' Hide Association. John Keyser, Pres.; George Pesinger, Vice Pres. ; P. S. Halsted, Treas. ; Avenue 1 corner Fifth. Butchers' Melting Association, 191 and 193 Chrystie. CabinetniMkers' As^ociation Warehouse, 143 Fulton. Centra! American Education Society, Eiiakim Phelps, Sec, Brick Church Chapel. Chamber of Commerce, James D. P. Ogden, Pres.; Prosper W. Wetmore, Sec GENERAL INFORMATION. 1^9 Chandlors' Melting Company, 189 Elizabeth. Chief Knpinetr's Otjice, (i City Hall. Circuit Comt Room, 2() City llall, .lolm W. Edmonds, Judge. Ciiy Chamberlain. Jo; epli Lawrence, 30 Wall. City Hall, in the Park. Citv Hall (new,) on Chambers, fiontinfi the Park. City Inspector, C. B. Archer ; Joshua Fleet, ass. ; 1 City Hal!. City Prison, Malachi Fallon, kt>ep'r. Centre, Leonard, Elm & Franklin. City VVorksJiops, Elizahetli, rear Bowery Theatre. Clerk of the Board of Aldermen, I). T. Valentine, 8 City Hall. Clerk of the Board of Assistant Aldermen, O. S. Barlles, 6 City Hall. Clerk of t*nperior Court, Jesse Oakley, 15 City Hall. Clerk of Supreme and Circuit Courts, VV. P Hallett, 10 City Hall. Clerk of Vice Chancellor's Court, and Assistant Registrar in Chan- cery, Robert Emmet, 28 City Hall. Collectors of Arrearages of Taxes, New City Hall. Collectors of Asses.-ments, J. C. Wil let; Anthony Chappel, Patrick M'Caferty, deps , 7 Hall of Records. Collector of City Revenue, Stephen Van Nostrand, 5 Hall of Records. Columbia College, foot of Park Place. College of Physicians and Surgeons, 67 Crosby. Commissary General (New- York State) Henry Storms, 30 Franklin. Commissary Subsistence, U. S. A., Capt. A. B. Eaton, 60 Greenwich. Commissioners for loaning certain money of the United States in the county of New- York, Prosper M. VVetmore, Nathaniel Jarvis. Comptroller, John Ewen ; Stock Clerk, W. H. Dikeman, 5 Hall of Records. Common Council Rooms, Aldennen 13. Ass. Aldermen, 27 City Hall. Concert Hall (now Minerva Rooms,) 406 Broadway. Coroner, Edmund G. Rawson, J'alls of Justice, Centre corner Leon- ard, and 259 Avenue 3. Corporation Attorney, Allen M. Sniffen, New City Hall. Corporation Oil House, 129 Mercer. Corporation Yard, Elizabeth, rear Bowery Theatre. Council to the Corporation, James T. Brady, 10 Wall. County Clerk, James Connor; A.H.Robertson, Deputy Clerk, 20 City Hall. Court of Common Phas, M. UlshoefTer, D. P. Ingraham, and C. P. Daly, Judges ; A . Warner, Clerk ; B. H. Jarvis, dep. ; 25 and 2fi Ciiy Hall. Court of Oyer and Terminer, John W. Edmonds, Judge ; Heniy Van- dervoort. Clerk ; 26 City Hall. Court of Sessions, Halls of Justice, Centre c. Leonard. F. A. Tall- madge. Recorder; II. Vandervoort, Clerk ; A. A. Phillips, Dep. Court of Chancery, City Hall. Croton Aqueduct Commissioners, J. A. Cofl'm, Prcs. ; Jesse Brush Henry L. Robertson, Purveyors ; New City Hall. Deaf and Dumb Institute, Fiftieth corner Avenue 4. Debtors' Prison, 22 Eldridge. Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, John Wurfs, President, 53 William ; coal-yards, Beach corner West, Greenwich corner King, and GouverneurSlip corner Fmnt. District Attorney. Mathew C Paterson, New City Hall. District Court of the United States, S. K. Betis, Judge, New City Hall. Dorr's Buildings, Exchatige Place corner Hanover. Dry Dock, foot of Tenth, near Avenue D. 130 GENERAL INFORMATION. Eye nnd Ear Infirmary, 47 Howard. Fall River Iron Works Company, 212 Water. Floating Dock, Plnneas Burgess, sup., 254 South. Fort Gansevoort, West near Great Kiln Road. Fulton Iron Foundry, QQ Sullivan. General Assi;jnee in Bankruptcy, W. C. H. W^addell, Chambers c. Broadway. Glenville Lead Works, 75 Front. Gothic Hall, 314 Broadway. Governor's Room, 11 City Hall. Grand Jury Room, Halls of Justice, Centre corner Leonard. Greenwood Cemetery, office 39 Wall. Hall of Records, in the Park, opposite Frankfort. Halls of Justice, corner of Centre, Leonard, Eltn and Franklin. Hazard Pnwder Company, A. G. Hazard, Pres., 89 Wall. Hastings Marble Company, 145 Hammond and 111 Water. Health Commissioner, Stephen R Harris, 3 Stone. Health Oflicer, 5 City Hall, or at Quarantine. House of Refuge, Twenty third, near E. R. Howell Works Company, 4G4 Cherrv. I. O. of O. F., Grand Sec, John G. treadwell, 68 Barclay. Infantry Drill Rooms, Centre Market, entrance Centre near Broome. Irish Emigrant Society, 6 Ann. Jones' Buildings, 60 and 62 Wall. Keeper City Hall, 9 City Hall. Kinepox Institution, City Dispensary, White corner Centre. Lackawana Coal Company, 572 Greenwich, Beach corner West, and Gouverneur corner Fnmt. Ladies' Depository for sale of Fancy Goods, 474 Broadway. Law Institute library, William H Griswold, 4 City Hall. Lodi Manufacturing Company, 51 Liberty. Lost or Strayed Children, diposite New City Ilall, at the Alms House, Bellevue, and at the Uppir Police. Lyceum of Natural History, meet at 6-i9 Broadway. Manhittan Gis Light Companv, office, 175 Mercer, Incorporated February, 1830. Perpetual. Capital, $500,000. Shares, $50; $35 paid in on each share. Dividends, February and August. Elec- tion, 3d Mond. in Jan. D. C. Colden, Pres. ; S. H. Howard, Sec. ; Chas. Broome, Engineer. Manhattan Gas Works, foot of West Eighteenth. Manhattan Water Works, 7 Reade, 40 Wall, Reservoir, 186 Mercer. Marble Cemetery, Second near Bowery, and between Avenue 1 and 2, James S.Hull, keeper, 357 Bowf;ry. Marine Court, west end New (;ity Hall, in the Park. Marine Surveyors, R. Brumley, T. H. Merry, clerk, Joseph Tink- ham, Russel Sturgis; ofhce, 87 Wall. Measurer of Grain, Paul Grout, Measurer General, 21 Coenties Slip. Mechanics' Exchiinge, 7 Broad. Mt'chanics' Institute, office, 18 City Hall, basement. Mechanics' Institute School, 12 Chambers. Mechanics' and Tradesmen's Society and School, 32 Crosby. Medical College of the N. Y. University, 659 Broadway. Mercantile Library association, Beekman corner Nassau. Merchants' Exchange, Wall corner William. Merchants' Transportation Line, 9 West. Methodist Book Concern, 200 Mulberry. GENERAL INFORMATION. 131 Minerva Rooms, 406 Broadway. Mortimer Building, Wall cor. New. Morton's Buildings, Piatt corner William. National Academy of Design, 348 Broadway. Naturalization Offices— Superior Court, Court of Common Pleas, Supreine Court, Clerk's offices, and Marine Court. Nautilus Dry Dock, foot of Jetferson Place, E. R. Navy Agent, Prosper M. Wetmore, 85 Water. New .Jersey Railroad and Transportation Co., 57 Morcliants' Ex. New York Steam Navigation Company, 20 Wasliington. New York City Hospital, 319 Broadway. New York Dry Dock Company, Tenth, near Av. D. New York Dying and Printing Establishment, 45 John. New York Gas Light Company, ITti Centre. Wm. W. Fox, Pres. ; C. L. Everitt, S - $239,938,317 00 STREET AND AVENUE DIRECTORY Of the City of New York. 135 EXPLANATION. If you wish to find the location of any pariicnlar house or store, — for instance No. 80 Allen-street, on consulting' ilie Siieet Directory, yiHi will obberve that 66 II is on tlie rig-lit hand of thut street and ilic corner of Grand, and 89 Allen on the right-hand corner of Broome : hence tlie desired number will be ou the right-hand side of Allen-street, between Grand and Bruome. Many of the streets are very irregularly numbered ; this is especially true in re^^ard to all streets above Eighth and east of Avenue 5th; and in some streets the numbers change from ri»-ht to left. Note.— The streets above Twelfth-street are divided by Avenue 5th, into East and West— as East Thirteenth, West Thirieeiuh— and those streets located as abore described will be found, therefore, in this work, under East and West Al. or A. Alley Cera. Cemetery Ch Church Ct. Court H. House ABBREVIATIONS. L. Lane PI. or P. Place M. Market Rt. Kighi Op. Opposite K. Road O. S. P. 0,U State Prison Sq. or S. Square Pk. Park Un. DniverBify ABINGDON PLACE Oh Troy street, com meiicea at lliidboii, ruiis to Greenvvicli. ABINGDON isa. On Bleecker, Hud Boii ttiiil Avenue dth Rt. Left. 1— Bank 4 — Avenue 8th — Hudson ALBAN i'. Coniiiiences at 122 Green'li, runs west. Rt. Left. 1 'Z Greenwich 13 lii Washington 21 20 West. ALBION PLACE. Corn. 3GI Fourth, c. Av. 3d, runs to 412 n. Av. iid. Rt. Left. 1 — Bowery 12 — Avenue 2d ALLEN. I'roin 122 Division north to Houston. Rt. Lift. 2 1 Division 8 U Walker 40 3'J Hester 6d G'J Grand 88 87 Broomo 114 113 D.laiicy 140 Urj Kivin-ion 178 177 .Stariiun 208 213 Houston AAHTV. From G83 Broadway west to Avenue 6lh. Rt. Left. 1 2 Broadway 13 8 Mercer 27 2G (irct.ne 43 4t) Wooster — (J2 Lauroiis 79 78 Tiioiiipson — 100 Sulhvan 119 ll(j iVlacilougal 141 142 Avenue titli. AMITY PLACE, on Laurens st. and trom 207 c. Bleecker to 232 Laurens c. Ami- ty, rni 135 Bieecker to 60 Amity. A.mity Place, an Alley, crosses VVooster at 209 and 210, and Greene at 193 and 194 contains "ibout 17 houses. AMoa. From Av. 6th west. Rt. Left. 1 Jeit'n Avenue 6th 25 M. Greenwich Av. 53 44 Factory 83 70 Fourth 115 lit) Bleecker 151 144 Hudson 105 104 (Greenwich 187 lf-0 Washington 211 204 West. ANN, from 220 Broad way etist to Gold. Rt. Left. 2 1 Broadway — 15 Theatre Alley 1() 19 ^:ls^au 48 51 William OH 09 Gold. ANTHONY, from 74 Hudson, east to Or ange. Rt. Left. 2 1 Hudson 20 27 VV. juroadway 02 03 Cliurch 90 91 Broadway 114 115 Elm 134 133 Centre 150 147 Little Water 108 — Orange. ASTOR PLACE, for; merly Art st.,fiii 746 Broad'y east to Bow- ery, bet. Fourth and Eighth street. ATiOHNEY, rm260 Division n. to Houst. Rt. Left. 2 1 Division 18 23 Grand 44 43 Broome 74 73 Delancy liO 111 Kivmgton 142 141 Stanton 178 179 Houston. AVENUE A. cent, of Essex and from 251 Hous'n u. to E.Kiver. Rt. Left. 2 1 Houston — 3 First 22 21 Second 32 'I'lnrd Fourth* Fitth Sixth Seventh Eighth Ninth Tenth Eleventh Twelfth Tiiirteenth Fourteenth. ♦Notbiiiltfm'lth to 14th «t. AVENUE B, ront. of Clinton and from 195, 136 STREET DIRECTORY. Hous'n n. to E. River. Rt. Lift. 1 2 Houston 17 14 Second 29 34 Third 48 Fourth Fifth* Sixth Seventh Eighth Nnith Tenth Eleventh Twelfth Thirteenth Fourteenth. *Not buiUlni5ihiol4ihst. AVE^•UE C, con. of Pitt St. and from 139 Hous'n n. to E.River. Rt. Left. 2 1 Houston 10 9 Second 27 Third Fourth Fifth Sixth Seventh Eighth Ninth Tenth Eleventh Twelfih. AVENUE 2d, con. ot] mine st. north to H. R. Chry.-4 93 Seventh l(H 107 Eighth 12fi 125 Ninth 14U 139 Tenth. 173 — Sixteenth 187 182 Seventeenth 207 lyfiEigliteenth 221 2lfi Nineteenth 241 2:)2 Twentieth 2.59 246 Twenty 1st 277 2tH) Twenty 2d 295 278 'I'wenty 3d 315 296 Twenty 4th 3-29 312 Twenty 5th 345 3150 I'wenty 6th « ,r^».x,, ^3.59 346 Twenty 7th •WENUE 1st. con. of 3^17 362 Twenty 8th Allen St. and from 295;aVENUE4th. con.of 1 Carmine — Minetta L. 27 Ch. op. Amity 47 Fourth 69 Barrow 81 Waverly PI. — PJghth 109 Greenwich Av. Ninth 143 Amos 144 Tenth 162 161 Eleventh 184 181 Twelfth 204 199 Tl)irteenth 220 221 Fourteenth AVENUE 7th, from Green'h Av. n. to H.R. Rt. Left. Greenwich Av. ^ Eleventh ^ Twelfth M Thirteenth £ Fourteenth 3 Fifteenth ^ Sixteenth o Seventeenth 2; Eighteenth AVENUE8th,rm Ab- ingdon sq. n. to H. R Rt. Left. Houston north toHar lem Uiver. Rt. Left. 2 1 Houston 10 9 First 36 35 Second 46 45 Third Fourth Fifth Sixth Seventh Eighth Ninth 160 157 Tenth Eleventh Twelfth Thirteenth Fourteenth. 96 11 Oi Bowery north to H Rt. Left. Fifteenth Sixteenth to Harlem. AVENUE 5th, from Waverly PI. n.toH.R. Rt. Left. Waverly PI. 1 2 An Alley 7 Eighth Clin..Pi. 23 Ninth 33 Tenth Eleventh Twelfth Thirteenth Fourteenth AVENUE 6th fmCar- Abingdon Sq. 10 Sq.Troy 32 35 Jane 40 45 Fourth 44 47 Horatio* — 54 Thirteenth 71 70 Fourteenth 87 82 Fifteenth 105 106 Sixteenth 121 120 Seventeenth 135 138 Eighteenth 151 1.54 Nineteenth 167 170 Twentieth 183 186 Twenty 1st * Above lliis tlie even Nos. on the left. 199 200 Twenty 2d 223 216 Twenty 3d. AVENUE 9th, from Gansevoort n. to H. R. Rt. Left. Gansevoort Thirteenth 12 11 Fourteenth 28 27 Fifteenth 48 47 Sixteenth 66 67 Seventeenth Eigliteenth Nineteenth Twentieth Twenty 1st Twenty 2d. AVENUE 10th, con. of Westn. toHarl.R- (Pro. E. Scm'y,) Chelsea 8TREKT DIRKCTORY 137 Giinsevoort ThiilfCiiUi I'ourtfeiilh KilKinili Six'.eeiiih !?evi-iiteentli Eigliteeiilh Nineteenth Twentieth Twenty Is:! Chelsea, Twenty 2i\. BANK, fin it5 Green wich Av. \v. to N. R m. Lift. 1 t! (jrcen'li Av. — 8 Factory 43 40 Fuurlti 73 74 Bleeokcr 7y H) HikImhi 93 y'2(;M-.iiwiph 1'25 liW Wasliiiigton 151 150 \V... P E. Sein. 108 107 Oran-.. BAYAKU i'L , opens at 794 \Va.stiingt(in BEACH, from 154 VV. B. way w. to N. R. Rt. Left 2 VV. Broadway Sq. St John's L. — Varick 42 Huiison 54 op. CoNister (J4 Green wicli — Wajliinglon 80 West. BEAVEU, troni 8 B. way east to Pearl Rt. Left. '2 1 Broadway 10 11 New 30 33 liroad 58 57 Wilham 7G 77 H BARCi.AY, fiom 229,9;^ .y^PVl^' r r Broadway w. to N. K. •^i'^^^pii^^. ^'J^^ ^ Ilani'ly n. to Amos Rt. Lrft 1 Hamersley 22 23 Downing 38 37 Carninie 52 51 Burton 68 ()7 iMorton 84 83 Commerce 88 87 Harrow 112 111 Grove 121) 125 Christoplicr. I! HERMAN. Ironi 34 i'k. Rows.e. toE. K. Jit. Lfft Rt. Left. 1 2 Broadway 21 Ch. Church 53 .50 op. Coil. PI. 73 70 Greenwich 87 82 Wa.-hmgton 105 lot) We.~t. BARROW, tm Wash- ington sq. VV. to N. R. Rt. Lift. 2 1 I^lacdou{.'al 28 29 Avenue Gth (14 01 I'ourtii 70 71 (irovc 102 101 Hlee( ker 132 131 Bedford 144 14.3 Coiiuiii roe 15« 1.53 Hudson 170 171 (ireeliwich 182 181 Wu.-hington — 20JWebt BAT AVI A, from 82 ',1 , ,. ,, Roosevfclte. to James. ':-'•> 'm' '."'"I Rt. Left. ■^'- ••'■^ 1 2 Roosevelt 25 20 James BATTERY PLACE, fml Bway w. to N.R Rt. Lift. 1 >. Broadway 5 '- (;reen\\ich — ^ Washington. Rt. Lrft. Bowery ;j. jg J Elizabein 33 ^0 i 51 52 Mulberry ^ 04 Crosby 7.3 70 Broadway 89 90 Mercer 103 104 (ireene 117 118 Wooster 133 134 Laurens 153 |5 Carol pi. Thomp. Park Row CI). Tlieatre Al. 12 Nas.-^au 38 William (iO (^)ld 90("liir 102 Pearl 11^ Water BI'.NSO.N, from 109 Leonard n. to Frank'n Rt. Lrft. 1 2 Leonard Franklin BFTHl'NE. fr'm 77C (;reen'h w. to N. R. Rt.^ J.ift. BAYARD, Pm 82 l)i [ " 25 W-'shm'gton vision west to Orangei 39 Wot. Rt. Lrft. — 1 Di ■ ision - F„r.y.h 17CI,rv.-lic 41 Bow. ry 55 op. Kli/abeth 73 .Mott 89 Mulberry 107 170 Sullivan 185 188 Macdougal — 204 Hancock 205 — Minetta — 212 Downing ^-57 '■2-28 Carmine 230^ Burton 247 — Cornelia — 200 Morion 205 — Jones — 272 Commerce 279 278 Burrow 295 294 Grove 311 312 Christopher 321> 330 Amos 347 340 Charles 307 3()8 Perry <75 378 Hammond 387 388 Bank Avenue 8th. BLOOMINGDALER calU'd a coiitin'n of B. way, fr'm Union pi. n. to Manbattanville. BOND, Pm 058 Broad- way e. to Bowery. Rt. Left. I 2 Broadway .59 50 Bowery BOVVERY, f m ter. of Chatham n. to Four leentli. Rt. Lrft. 1 — Division 2 Doyers — 20 Pell 29 28 Bayard 03 00 Walker 95 90 Hester 127 122 (;rand 1.5.3 150 Broome 181 - - Deiancy — 190 Spring 215 --- KivMigion |BIRMIN(;HAM fmP4: — 232 Prince I Henry, s. to Madison., 247 — Stanton \Rt. Lrft. 281 286 Houston 1 2 Henry 305 — First 13 12i MM.Iison - 320 Blrecker I BLEECK KR, fr'm 320 323 — Second ; Bow. ry--wesl, then — 328 Bond j iinrth to A venu e 8. |377 —Third - ^y 138 STREET DIRECTOR — 348 Great Jones 318 Hospital op. Pearl 363 364 Fourth 334 337 yVnthony 379 378 (>1J. Fifth 344 345 op. Cath. L. 397 Vaux. Gard. Sixth 348 347 Leonard 4--J3 4U8op. Seventh 362 363 Frunkhn 440 Astor Place 378 -379 White 437 44-2 Eighth 398 3ii9 Walker 457 458 Ninth 475 476 Tenth 413 Lispniard 416 417 CuKil 4il5 494 op. Eleventh 511 51'2 Twelfth 43-2 431 Howard 458 4.-J9 Grand 533 532 Ttiirleeiith 486 487 Broome 553 Fourteenth. .-.■2i; 5-29 Spiing BOWLliNGGUKMX. .-.li.,; .-,;;7 Prince rmWhallw.ioc^iiiLr. rii-' (I'-i'J Houston Rt. Left. !i!-J G43 Bleecker — 1 Whitehall t).)l> Gel op. Bond — 7 State. 683 Amity BRIDGE, fm 15 State east to Broad. 68U Great Jones 696 699 Fourth Rt. Left. 7!3 Wash. PI. 2 1 State 731 WavtrlyPl. 12 1 1 Whitehall 746 745 op. Astor PI. 756 757 Eighth 40 39 Broad. BROAD, fm 11 Wall 772 771 JNinth i Boutii to E. fiiver. 784 785 Tenth \Rt. Left. 818 op. Eleventh ! 2 1 Wall 830 829 Twelfch 30 25 Exchange PL Thirteenth 68 59 Beaver Fourteenth. 74 — Marketfield BROOME, from E. R. — 85 South Win. west io Hudson. 1 90 89 Stone Rt. Lift. — 1 East 1100 —Bridge 110-2 101 Pearl 2 7 Tompkins 1108 105 Water 18 15 Mangin 126 113 Front 32 31 Goerck 154 129 South. 50 49 Lewis BROADWAY, from 66 63 Gannon Battery place north to 82 81 Columbia Fourteenth. 100 9? Sheriff Rt. Left. 114 1!5 Willett i — 1 Battery PI. 126 125 Pitt 1 2 - Markeitield 146 143 Ridge 8 — BoavtT 162 159 Attorney — 25 Morris 178 177 Clinton 58 —Exchange PI. 196 193 Suffolk 1 — 69 Rector 212 209 Norfolk 88 —Wall 228 225 Essex 106 —Pine 244 241 Ludlow — lllThan;es 2f;0 355 Orcliard 124 133 (Jedar 276 275 Allen 150 147 Liberty 2i;-2 29! Eidrid-e 171 Clortlandt ;•!!)(; -Mm Forsyth !l72 Maiden Lane ::f24 32:i C'hry.tie i 191 Dcy 338 337 liowery |!92 Jo, in 3.56 35r> Elizabeth i2i2 207 Fulton 372 371 Mott ■220 — Ann 386 387 Mulberry jAstor H. V^esey 395 Centre M. PI. 229 Barclay -£ 237 Park PI. 406 Marion 403 Centre =! 2t7 Murray 416 413 Elm ^ 260 \A^«rren 430 427 Crosby 280 273 (,^!iambera 440 439 Broadway 1290 289 Rtnde 454 453 Mercer 302 301 Duane 468 467 Greene 482 481 Wooster 502 50]^ Laurens 520 517 Thorn uson 532 531 Sullivan 540 537 op. Cld-rke .562 561 V^arick 590 591 Hudson. BURLING SLIP, fm 234 south-east to E- R. Rt. Lift. 2 1 Peurl 10 a Water 24 21 Front 40 4i South. BURTON, from 236 Bkecker west ra St. Jolin'.-t Cemetsry. Rt. Left. 1 2 Bleecker 29 30 Bedford 41 42 St. Jn's Cem, CANAL, fm 157 Cen- tre w. to a. River. Rt. Left. 2 1 Centre 12 9 Elm 33 Cortlandt A. 42 39 Broadway 56 59 op. Mercer 7C — Greene — 83 Cluirch 92 99 op. Wooster 112 — Laurens — Ill W. Broadway 130 — Thompson — 125 Laight 148 145 op. Sullivan 162 1,55 Varick — 159 Vestry 204 185 Hudson — 221 Watts 220 — Renwick 238 231 Greenwich 256 249 Washington M. M. West (\'\NNON, from 504 Grand n. to Houston. Rt. Left. 2 1 Grand 20 19 Broome 46 45 Delancy 72 73 Rivingtou 104 105 Stanton 136 137 Houiton. CARLISLE, Ir'm 112 Green'h west to N. R. Rt. Left. 1 2 Greenwich 9 10 Washington 15 II) West. CARMINE, rmx\v.6 west to Varick Rt. L>'ft. 1 — Avenue 6 — 2 Mineita Lane 17 18 Bleecker 47 50 Bedford STREET DIRECTO 130! 78 Varick i M- -;''" lirounie. Oak n. to Madioon. ! Ciarksoii. CENTUr. M. \liKET Rt. Lift. iCAROLl.N'K, rr'in2U pi. fi). llJOGnmilii.lo '2 1 Oak Dusiiie liurlli 10 Jay. I lirounif Hiid bet. Ceii- 28 2!) Mmlispn. \m. J^ci't. ireaiid Mulbt-rry. .CtlEKKV, fiii Frank- ! iJ I'Duane \Rt J.rft. li.-i Sy. tasi to E. R. I 16 17 Jay. I 1 M. ine. I— 10 I'earl BI'Kerst. and iVom la-lCll AMBERS, fni fiO! 45 44 Roosevelt llletciier c. Lauren^: Cliatliain to 153 Bk-eclier c. Rt. Left. to J\'. U, i'lioiiip^on. Rt. J.tjt. ^ I liaurrns 14 15 Ti,oiii|>>on. 77 7d James l-"J 44 \\ asliington CHARLES 'alley Gr'ii Av. w. to N. R, Rt. Lift. I 2 Green'h Av, 23 24 Factory E. R Rt. L,ft. 2 1 Ci-erry 12 11 Water 24 23 Somli CHRISTOPHER, fm Greenwich Av. w. to Nifrtii River. Rt. Left. 1 2 Green'h Av. 11 12 Gay 33 28 Factory Di.p. VVnveriyPl 67 64 Fourth y3 88 Rieecker Cii. Bedford fm VVasli'n to VVesi,12!) — Hudson he(. Perry & Charles. 141 142 Green wicli CHARLTON, fm 29 151 150 Wasl.inglot CEDAR, t;m'l81 Pearl Macdougal west loN.' M. IrtG West, west to North River Rt. Left. 1 2 Pearl 39 38 Wdlinm 71 74 Nassau '1 81 80 Bina.lway {I 97 9t; Ten.,.!e llI05 104 Luii.h.r ,119 120 <;ree|,wieh 131 I2>5 Washiiitjioa ' 159 142 West. iCENTUE, from .11 II Cliat'iii 11. to Broome. Rt. T.-ft. 2 I'k Clialhanj 14 13 Chambers 23 Kendo 38 33 Duano 50 49 Pearl 74 75 Aiitlioiiy 90 89 Leonard 108 Franklin 134 135 White 1150 149 Walker l.")7 Canal 1192 201 op. HePter 1200 201 Howard i224 225 Grand Uiver. \Rt. Left. I 1 2 Macdougal i 55 .54 \' a rick j 89 8!) Hudson !1 1 I 112 Greenwich 119 l-JO Washiiigion 1211 12^ \V,si. CII.ATilA.M, from CHRYSTIE, fr'm 54 Division n. to HoUd'n. Rt. Lift. 2 1 Division 10 11 B.iyard 42 41 Walker 74 '1 Hester 100 101 (irand oCh. 127 Broome ; FraiiUrt Rt. J J ft. i 1 Pk. Frankfort ! 34 Centre 60 Cbambcrs i r,7 (;2 Diiane 123 KM Pearl I 116 Orange 135 K'....-evelt 14« Mulberry 1G7 ItiO op. James 17ri Mot 187 192 op. Oliver 210 Doye,.:. CHATH.VMsa. fr'm 2 Cailiarine we-t ami south to E. Broad c'liHSTNUT, fi'ui to Duyers. 148 151 Delancy nt) 175 Rivington 202 205 Stanton Ceiri233 H>iuslon. CHURCH, from 191 Fulton n. to F'^Rmadwnv CORNELIA, Tni 179 195 194 Ridge 79 78 Henrv ^ ^ourtl, w. to Bleec'r. Ch. 212 Pitt 191 190 Mndison W^- ^>''/«- |229 228 Willett 207 208 Monroe I 2 Fourth [245 244 Sheriff 219 '"^O Cherry i "^^ *^^ Bleeckei. |263 262 Columbia 231 fob. Ins. Water CORTLANDT. from Sflf ^i Cannon wareh. South. ^ 171 Broadway, west "^"" ^"^ Le— CLINTON ALLEY.l to N. River, f m 79 Clinton west to Rt- Left. 86 Suffolk. I 2 ] Broadway CLINTON PL, 8th St. J 50 .51 Greenwich and from 755 Broad- 64 63 Washington way, c. Eighth to 54 ,82_8I West^ Eighth, Rt. Left. 1 2 Broadway 12 Mercer 30 Greene 41 42 University PI. fi.'i 64 Avenue 5tli. CLINTON PL. EAST. CORTLANDT AL wis 319 320 (ioerck j3:i5 334 Mangin 357 356 Thompkins East. DEPEAU ROW. Left side of Bleecker, from Thomp. to 178 Bleec'r 1 fm. 33 Canal south to rCii'ii'^V^c'^'iJ'S" Franklin. I Walker White I Franklin. (COTTAGE PL. ' of Hancock st DEPEYSTER, from 139 Waters. toE.R. Rt. Left. 2 1 Water 12 l\}^ . ' Front bet.! 20 25 r S T R E U T DIRECTORY 141 32 37 South. DRY DOCK st. bet. DESliROSSES, from Avenue C. and Ave-1 J 95 Hudson west to N. nue U. iiiid fm IViiuhi River. Rt. Left. 2 1 Hudson 22 21 Greenwich 30 31 Washington 40 41 West. DEY, f'ra 19 1 Broad way vv. to N. River. Rt. Left. 2 1 Broadway 58 57 (irceiiwich 72 71 Wasliington 88 87 W<>st. DIVISION, from Bowery e. to Grand. Rt. Left. — 2 Bowery 1 — Catlierine 45 54 Ciiry.-tic 84 For.-^yth 83 88 op. Market 82 Bayard 100 Eldridge 122 Allen 139 134 op. Pike 14tj (Jrcliard — ItJrt Walker 175 170 Ludlow — 182 E^,.se.'c 191 Rutgers 204 iNorfolk 217 218 op. Jefferson 226 Sufl'olk 240 Hester 241 242 Clinton 260A .Attorney 277 Montgomery 281 280 Ridge 299 Gouverneur — 298 Grand DOMINICK, from 19 Clarke w. to Hudson. Rt. Left. 1 2 Clarke 19 20 Varick 51 54 Hudson DOVER, fm 342 Pearl Boutii to E. River. Rt. Left. 2 1 Pearl 16 13 Water 22 21 Front 28 29 South DOWNLNG. from 212 Bleecker w. to Varick Rt. Left. 1 2 Bleeeker Ch. 32 Bedford 65 66 Varick DOYERS, »\n 2 Bow- cry north to I'ell. Rt. Left. 2 1 Chatham 18 19 Pell I to Thirteenth. DUANE rm28Rose west to N. River- Int. Left. 1 -^ Rose 11 10 William 121 18 Chatham 29 28 City Hail PI 41 Cross 34 Centre 59 58 Elm 93 92 Broadway 123 124 Church 2149 — W. Broadway |lt)3 164 Hudson Itiy Wq. Staple 1S7 190 Greenwich 1201 196 Washington 1211 — Caroline 217 Sij. West DUTCH, from 49 John north to Fulton Rt. Left. 2 1 Fulton 20 19 John EAST from 57G Grand east to Rivington. Rt. Left. 1 Grand •J Broome ^« ,aaS Delancy vi? ■^ Rivington EASTBRClADWAY fm Oliver St. c. Chat ham Sq. c. to Grand. Rt. Left. 1 —Oliver — 8 Chatham Sq 17 14 Catherine 73 72 Market 117 116 Pike 161 162 Rutgers 1H9 190 Jfirerson 219 21M Cliiiion 2.V.I 2i)(l Montgomery 2^*7 2-tJ (ionviTiieur :99 — 300 Grand 311 SheritT EAST CLINTON PL. opens at 44 Clinton st. EAST COURT, from Twenty Second n. to Avenue 6. EDEN'S ALLEY, (S.'c Ryder's Alley.) E. EIGHTEENTH, fm Av. 5th to E. R. Rt. Left. Avenue HtU Bloom'dale R. Avenue 4tli Irving riaco Avenue 3d /7en2j 2d 1st A B E. 1-OURTEENTH, fm Av. 5th to E. R. Rt. Left. Avenue 5th Union Place University PI Broadway Bowery Irving Place Avenue 3d 2d 1st A EAST FIFTEENTH fm Av. 5th e. to E. R, Rt. Left. Avenue 5th Union Place Irving Place Avenue 3d 2d 1st A B C E. NINETEENTH. fm Av. 5th e. to E. R, Rt. Left. Avenue 5th 4th Irvhig Place Avenue 3d 2d 1st A B E. SEVENTEENTH, fm Av.Sthe. toE. R. Rt. Left. Avenue 5th Union Place Avenue 4th Irving Place Avenue 3d 2d Ist A B EAST SIXTEENTH, fm Av. 5th e. toE.R. Rt. Left. Avenue 5th Union Place Aveiuie 3d Irving Place Avenue 3d 2d Ist A B T R S E T DIRECTORY, i^^'~ j Greene I'tlJ I *Jf?rcer ifc'o^ (.Brondwny — 14/ L.iuyetie Fl. I — Hi) lii>wery jt; f — • r Avenue ."M E. THIRTEENTH, i G5 — Avenue 5tli I'm Av. oili e. lo E. R. t: g rUijiver»ity PI. Rt. Left. " ' Avenue 5rli Uiiiveishy Ph Broadway Bowery Avenue 3d ;; 1st '■■■ 8 l-r^lj ■• ^ Dry Dock '■=£^1 " ]st Avenue D I^J- " i E. TWE.NTIETH, 'f^ct^i 1. " A fmAv 5tlie. toE. Ri " B Rt. Left. " C Avenue 5th '3514 393 " D Biooni'daie G '4V,S 403 Lewis Avenue 4tii jELDKlDtJE, from JOO Irving Pliicc I Division n. lo Houston. Avenue 3(1 Rt. Left. '2(\ "Z I Division Jst 2t> 27 VViilker A 5d 57 Httfier En^-t IVypT 78 7^) (Jr.-.iid E.TWENTY FIRST, ];■ ) ' :■ r. -.m lit. Left. I-,'- '-^ : y Avenue 5t1i il j ■ i-ion Blooin'dalcR. r.4 : ■. .;\-,.:.i;.,:] Avenue 4lli -^Oii C.ir. iioar-ton Lexing'n Av. EI.EVENTil, fm A v. Avenue 3d ! 7t!i east lo E. River. '' 'id \Rt. Left ' Ist, 2 — txreenwicii Av. A ! 4 1 Avenue 7tti Ea'^t Rivor ! " filli E. TV/EATY SEC'DlOr, 113 " 5th }'m Av. 5ili e. to E. R. 13t) 141 University PI. 2-2 Rt. Left. Avenue .5rh BluoniMiiieR Avenue Av\ Lexiii-'n Av. Avenue 3d 2d Jst A East R; Broadway Bowery Avenue 3d A B C Dry Dork Avenue D E, TVVENTY-T'fl), ELIZABETH from 5^ t'ni A V. 5tli e. to E. R. Bayard n. to Bleecker. Rt. Lift. Rt. Left. Avenue .'»t!i I 2 J Hnyird Bloom'daleR.. '-8 2n \v aiker Avenue 4th ^ (i4 (>3 !(e>tor Lexina'n Av. 94 «)3 (iiand Avenue 3d I-J2 \-H Hroonie 2d 15H 157 Srnng 1st li)8 1119 Prince A 2-l«i 2-17 H(,u-t()n Enst River 272 271 DlMeker EIGHT?!, rroniUtJAv. Ei.M, from Iti Reade, <>lh east lu E. River, nortli to Spring. Rt L.ft. Rt Left. 2 I Avensie Gth ; 1 2 IJende 36 — Macdougal : « Manhattan PI, 17 16 Dunne 35 34 Pearl 47 50 Anthony 5!i Caiharine La. 61 62 Le-.nard Ar.* 74 iVanklm 83 84 VVii.le <)7 'JO Walker ioy 11J6 Canal 127 I2l> Howard 149 14ri Grand 177 176 Bruuine — 2l4^pring E.SS^EX! from 182 Di- ;»ion n. to Houston. ^•«- ^'i>s. . . 1 Division 25 H^•ster 56 5l Grand — 6'.l Essex Mar. PI. 72 73 Brcjome > sary. / Christ'r — 2(1 A nios — 36 Caries 45) 48 Perry 65 — Hammond 7" 7H Bank FERRY, rmH6Go!d. .•"•nut I; east lo Pearl. Rt. Lift. 2 I Gold lit Jacob ."'8 37 Ciiir .56 55 Par! FIFTH, fm370How- eiy, ea-t to E. River. Rt. Left. I 2 Bowery 49 46 Avenue 2d STREET D K C T O R y 143[ Avenue 1st A B 333 •' \l 3&3 -M'-i ''. 1^ 41)8 LiCWHi „ FIRST, fin :W5 Bow ery, «"afil tu Ho;i=,ion. Ht. J.cft. 1 y IJowpry l-ii'.xira 23 26 Avenue 2(1 73 74 " 1st ll;:5 124 " A I Houston _ FISHER'ri <:OURT, Re:ir2-i Oak;;} build IfLKTCHER, f m 20R Pearl, south to h. K. I 2 Peirl 15 HJ VVaier 31 30 I'roiit 43 42 South FORSYTH, fro 4!6 415 Avpnue2d 470 4(i7 Mar. 8i Fl'LTON, from the E. Uivcr, west to JS'. K. in. Lt'ft.^ , 2 South 18 Front 3'J Water 38 l\-iirl fvjciitr ti3 Ryder s Alley .„ 70 Gold 101 100 VViliiam 110 Dutch 125 124 Nassau 1574 158 Broadway 180 188 op. Churc h 2-5 221 (ireeiiwich 230 2;i8 Washington Mar 2(34 W. st Division, n. to IIous tun. lit. Left . . 2 Division 1 Bayard 28 2'J Walker m 61 Hester 00 01 (irand 112 100 Broome 134 131 Delancy lfi4 103 Riviiigton 192 101 Sianion Cli. Ch. Houston 4% " 14* .537 Ch. ;; o 591 500 " D 621 020 Lewis 025 020 Ka^t River 'Heie !li-{-vi-n .>ii...bev ;hiiii'!-e uKiii rijriil 1° '«''• FRAxNKFORT. from I\o. 1 Chatham, east to Pearl. m. L'ft 1 2 Chatham 17 18 VViiliain 34 Rose , , 45 40 op. Gold 54 Vaudev.-ater 50 02 op. Jacob 77 78 CI: ft" 85 00 Pearl FRANKEIN, from 66 Orant'e, w. to iN. R 2 1 Orange 18 10 Centre 56 Co'rtlandt Al. jQAY, fii'i hT Waver- 70 69 op. Scott's Al. ly Place n. to Christo- 92 97 Ouireh I pher. 124 125 W. Broadvvayj«. J^etj (;AXSK\o6RT,(for; iner , from 13 Kt. Left •ij- (;r(r:uKilnRM)i 11 13 west to ]N. R. i Thirteenth Fourth Hudson Greenwich Washington We.-,t 132 Ch. op. Varick 108 103 Hudson 104 101 Greenwich 202 203 Washington West FRANKLIN SQ. on P.arl. from 10 Cherry 352 Pearl FOURTH, from lnir-:p,jQ|v^-'P^ f^om No. 51 teenth. east to E. K. \vi,ite!iall,<..ioRoose Rt. L'jt. (Tmrteenth Horatio Avenue 8lh 2 3 Jane 13 Troy 32 33 Biiik 44 45 ll.unmona C2 01 I'lrry 75 Cliarles 92 93 Ainos 106 Chri.-.loplicr 1 16 Sq. Grove 132 137 Barrow 1150 Jones 170 Coriii^ha 172 175AvnMr> fit' Ic'iH VvVs\VMa("r'sa! 175 V8lt Bi'irlini,' Slip !240 ••'^op.Th'in 100 2ltO Fulton 1278 277 WooLr H' I n- j^ ^.^f ^ i^ ^;;^'!i!^:v;'^ ,25iU54U:vtr "^ :.' : : ^ I r. iway l2«3 2.,^ Xer 378 370 Bowery ' Last_imcr_ . 2 V\ ..verly PI. 21 20 Christopher^^ GOERCK, from 538 Grand, n. to E. R at. Left. 2 I Grand 18 19 Broome 40 47 Dolancy 78 70 Rivinglon Whiteliaii.e.io tvo^.^K- <'i;'- 1 J ' ?,';'"^!'" v.lt-begins again at 4- 4 H .^^to" Mo^itgomery and runs lyO ^ 1|; ^i -nl^ ^^^.^^^ '" /?A i Line. n. to Frankfort ^"i ^Twhitehall '"' ' 5 6 More 21 22 Broad 41 42Coii)ties SI'P 53 51 Ciiyler's Allty 77 78 Old Sliu 93 04Gouv.-rHirLa. 101 104 <|). Jones La 113 114 Wall 131 134 Pine 137 140 D.pf yster 151 151 Mud. 11 Lan3 1.50 100 Fl( U 1 Maiden Lane 15 Plait 27 John 51 Fulton 50 Ann 05 Beekman 75 Spruce Ferry W2 103 Frinkfort ^ GOUVERNEUR. fm 200 Divioion, south to Water. lit. Left. 2 Division 1'-. Broadway 20 Henry 32 Madison 48 Monroe 01 Clierry 74 Water 1 5 19 Ch. I 05 ' 73 1 144 STREET DIRECTORY. GOUVERNEURLA. — 26 Lafayette PI, 735 734 Perry from South to Water. 57 56 Bowery GREAT KILN RO'D, 1751 750 Hammond 2 1 South '769 768 Bank (See Gansevoort st.) i — 776 Bethune 12&15, I3& 16 Front GKEENKTm 76 Ca- 793 792 'I'rov 1 2 Water nal, n. to Eighth. (See-805 806 Jane GOUVERNEUR SL. also Little Green st.) ,821 822 Horatio fni 613 Water, south Rt. Left. 835 836 Gansevoort to East River. 2 1 Canal GREENWICH AVE- Rt. Left. 40 37 Grand NUE, from 105 Av. Mark. 1 Front 54 51 Broome 6th, north to Av. 8th. 12 1 1 Water 84 85 Spring Rt. Left. GRAND, from 80 Va- 118 117 Prince Mar. 1 Avenue 6fh rick, east to E. R. 148 J47 Houston War. op. 7 Christopher Rt. Left. 184 185 Bleecker 22 21 Amos 1 2 Varick 214 215 Amity — 35 Charles 17 20 Sullivan 228 227 Fourth 62 —Perry 41 42 Thompson 244 243 Washing'n PI. 74 73 op. Eleventh 77 Hammond 51 56 Laurens 250 251 Waverly PI. 69 72Wooster 260 263 Clinton PI. 8th 80 Avenue 7th 87 88 Greene GREENWICH, from — 95 Bank 103 104 Mercer 5 Battery Place, north 107 Troy 117 114 Broadway to Gansevoort. 106 —Twelfth 125 124 Crosby Rt. Left. 120 117 Jane 141 140 Elm I 2 Battery Place - 137 Horatio 147 150 Centre 39 40 Morris 132 137 W.TJiirteenth 155 Market, Orange 59 64 op. Tinpot A). 146 Avenue 8th 160 Cent. Mar. PI. 89 92 Hector GROVE, fm 490 Hud- 173 172 Mulberry 113 112 Carlisle son, e. to Waverly PI. 189 188 Molt 125 122 Albany Rt. Left. 203 204 Elizabeth 131 126 op. Thames 2 1 Hudson 219 222 Bowery 139 134 Cedar \S 11 Bedford 231 236 Chrystie 145 142 Liberty 48 45 Bleecker 251 250 Forsyth 159 158 Cortlandt 80 Sq.l Fourth 98 jW^averlyPI. 271 268 Eldridge 287 284 Allen 173 170 Dey 185 180 Fulton 299 298 Orchard 199 194 Vesey HAGUE, fm 367 Pearl 317 316 Ludlow 217 210 Barclay north to Cliff. 331 Market, Essex 235 228 Robinson Rt. Left. 1347 346 Norfolk 251 248 Murray 1 2 Pearl 364 Suttblk 269 266 Warren 11 10 Cliff 379 378 Clinton 281 280 Chambers HALL PLACE, rear 395 396 Attorney 297 294 Reade of Tompkins Market, 411 Ch. Ridge 117 306 Duane and runs north from 429 Division 331 318 Jay Sixth to Seventh St.. 432 Pitt 347 334 Harrison and is between Ave- — — Willett 163 352 Franklin nues 2d and 3d. — — Scammel 377 364 North Moore Rt. Left. 441 — E. Broadway 191 376 Beach 1 M. Sixth 467 408 Sheriff 407 396 Hubert 7 M. Seventh 487 486 Columbia 423 410Laight HAMERSLEY, from 491 492 Henry 4.37 428 Vestry 560 Houston, west to 501 504 Cannon 451 442 Desbrosses North River. 507 — Walnut 465 464 Watts Rt. Left. 525 520 op. Lewis 473 480 Canal 1 — Houston 531 528 op. Madison 509 514 Spring 531 536 op. Vandam 17 Bedford M. 538 op. Goerck 14 Smith M. Corlears 5.55 554 Charlton 61 62 Varick 554 Mangin 557 564 op. Monroe 570 Tompkins 571 572 King 89 90 Hudson 587 586 Hamersley 111 112 (ireenwich BOl 600Clarkson 123 124 Washington 567 576 East 617 6!6Leroy 145 146 West GREAT JONES, Pm 633 634 IMorlon HAMILTON, from 87 680 Broadway, east to R51 654 Barrow Catharine, e. to Mar- Bowery. 691 682 Christopher ket. Rt. Left. 701 700 Amos Rt. Left. 2 1 Catharine ^ 1 2 Broadway 717 716 Charles TRKET DIRKCTORY. 1451 50 51 Market Itil HAMMOM), from 77 175 Greenwich A v., west 191 to Tv'ortii Uiver. Rt. Left. 1 ii (Jreen'ch Av. — 18 Factory 47 50 Fourth 79 80 BJeecker 89 y-2 Hudson 107 ll-2(;r.(n\vich 1.15 i:U) Washington 163 ]t)4 W. 1G2 Ehzabeth 174 Mott 190 Mulberry SiOd Orange 2 Mi Centre 5G0 Hamersley [lIOWARry. Jrom 200 ('entre, w. to Mercer. \Rt. Left. 2 \ CVntre HORATIO, from 137 10 9 Khn Greenwich Lane west! 28 27 op. Crosby I to JV. River. Rt. Lcjt. ~~ £j Greenwicli A ^ ^ Avenue 8th ■=> ^ Fourth £_-2 Hudson HANCOCK, from i s tx, Greenwich 563 Houston, north to, t Washington Bleecker. .SSs- West Rt. Left. IHOBOKEN, from 474 1 2 Houston WaslniiL'ton, 25 26 Bleecker North River. HANOVER, from 121 At. Left Pearl, north to Wall Rt. Left. Ex. 1 Wall 6 — Exchange PI. 8 5 Beaver 12 1 1 Pearl HANOVER Sa'RE, on Pearl, near Old SI. HARRISON, from 81 Hudson, w. to N. R. Rt. Left. 2 1 Hudson 5 Htapie 26 23 (Jreenwich 38 33 Wa^hington 60 53 West HENRY, from 16 Oli- ver, east to Grand. Rt. Left. 2 1 Oliver 16 13 Catharine 66 Ch. Market 84 85 op. Birming'm 102 103 Pike 146 Ch. Rutgers 174 177.letrerson 206 207 Clinton 246 247 Montgomery 272 275 Gouverneur 284 285 Scammel 3.38 — Walnut .325 Grand H E S T E R, fm 161 Clinton w. to Centre. 3' Rt. Left Mar. 55 ington Clinton 2 Division 12 SulVolk .30 Norfolk 4H Ks>e,v 64 Ludlow 7H Orrliard 94 Alien 108 FJd ridge 1214 1-"^ Forsyth 137 134 (;hry.stie 147 148 Bowery 1 Wasl 11 West HOLTSTON. fm East R. west to Hamersley. Rt. Left. East River 2 Mangin 25 24Goerck 39 36 Lewis 52 Catinon Manhattan 68 Columbia 71 AveruieD Mar. 98 Hherilf 118 Willett 138 Pitt 139 .Avenue C 156 Ridge 172 Attorney 190 Clinton 195 Avenue B 208 Suffolk 226 Norfolk 248 Khscx .Avenue A 264 Ludlow 280 Orchard 294 Allen Avenue 1st .308 Eldridge Ch. Forsyth Avenue 2d 3.'')0Chrystie 372 R.iw.ry :iHT \\y\ i:ii/al.eth i3-.lit:i!is .M„tt 407 41(1 Mulberry '42.-> 42J Crosby 443 4:t>' I'.rca.iway 4.")3 4.')() M. rcer '47! 4lif'> (Jrcne j4.'-5 4."^4 Wooster j.503 .500 Laurens |.'>23 522 Thompson [.5.39 .5:^8 Kullivan 555 554 Ma«'dougal |.5t>3 — Hancock v.i 43 Broadway 54 53 Mercer HUBERT, from 149|| Hudson, w. to N. R. Rt. Left. 2 J Hudson 6 9 Collister 16 17 Greenwich I 30 33 Washington 50 49 West west to HUDSON, from 137 Cli.-imbers, north to Fourteenth. Rt. Left. " 1 C\ 74 251 345 ambers 13 Reade 29 Duane 55 op. Thomas 61 Jay 73 op. Anthony 81 Harrison 96 91 op. Leonard 102 101 Franklin 122 121 North Moore 128 133 Beach Sq. 149 Hubert 166 165 Laight 180 181 A'-estry 195 Desbrosses 206 213 1 Canal |216 219/ Watts 248 243 op. Broome 282 275 op. Dominick 304 3U.3 Spring 326 .323 Vandam 34() 343 Charlton 3 ti .3(i3 King 386 387 Hamersley 402 403 Clarkson 421 I.,eroy 438 447 Morton 464 4fi5 Barrow 490 481 Ch.op. Grove .')02 .501 Cliristopher ')20 519 Amos 538 535 Charles .552 5.-)l Perry 57f) 56!) Hammond 586 .5H5 Bank Sq. 611 Troy Sq. .lane 638 637 Horatio 652 651 Ganscvoort Thirteenth Fourteenth IRVING PLACE, be- tween Av. 3d and 4th. Fourteenth Fifteenth fl46 STRKETDIRKCTORY. j] Sixteenth i 84 85 South 164 J 6c Houston Sevtiiteenth JERSEY, from 139 196 195 Bleecker Eigliteentli Crosby, east to Mul- 232 — Amity Wilitterurii l)erry. LEONARD, from 96 TueiitietJi Rt. Left. Hudson, e. to Orange. Giamorcy P'k 2 Croshy Rt. Left. JACOB, tVoin ly Ferry 14 15 Muihtrrv 2 1 Hudson east to Friiiikibrt. JOHN, fin r;'2 Broad- 39 \V. Broadway Rt. L-5f't. way, east .to Pe.'ui 70 m Church ii 1 Ferry Rt. Left. 92 93 Broadway 22 25 Frankfort 2 1 Broadway lOi) Benson JACKSOxN AV., con- 30 31 Nassau 118 121 Elm tinuation ol Wooster 49 Dutch 142 143 Centre street, north fni Wa- 70 09 William 170 105 Orange veriy Place to Union bd 87 Gold LEROY,rm 421 Hud- Place. 101 Cliff son, west to N. R. JACKSON PLACE, 120 1 19 Pearl Rt. Left. norta Irom rear ol Itj JONES, from 150 1 2 Hudson Downing. Fourth, w.toBieecker. 21 22 Greenwich JAMErt.fm !67Chat- Rt. Lift. 1 2 Fourth 29 30 Washington 1 ham, south to Cherry. 43 44 West Rt. Left. 47 Bleecker LEROY PLACE, fm 1 2 Chatliam JONES'S COLFRT, 88 Bleecker, c. Mer- cer, to 104 Bleecker, 43 ??}^-Iaciison rear 48 and 50 Wall. JONES'S LANE, fm c. Greene. 101 Front, s. to E. R. Rt. L'ft. 1 2 Mercer 1 71 7-i Oak Rt. Lift. 1 8.5 88 op. BatavJa 1 2 Front 15 16 Greene 103 104 Cherry 9 8 South L E ^V I S, from 525 [JAMES SLIP, fm 78 KING, from 57 Mac- Grand, n. to Eighth. Cherry, s. to E. Pt. dousal, w. to N. R. Rt. Left. Rt. Left. Rt. Left. 2 I Grand 1 2 Cherry 1 2 Macdougal 20 19 Broome 9 10 Water 57 60 Varick 48 49Delancy 19 20 South 95 96 Hudson 72 69Rivington JANE,* from 117 125 126 iireenwicn 98 97 Stanton 1 Greenwich Av., west 139 138 Washington 130 131 Houston 1 to North River. West 148 149 Third \Rf. Left. LAFAYETTE FLA., 170 199 Fourth 2 I Greenwich Av. from 26 Great Jones, — 185 Fifth 1 62 57 Fourth north to Eiuht'n, and — 197 Sixth 64 59 Aveime 8th hetween Broadway & — 215 Seventh 80 Sq. Hudson Bowery. — 231 Eighth Greenwich Rt. Left. LEXINGTON AVE.. VVas'iiiiglon 2 I Great Jones north from Gramercyj Weit 10 Ch. Fourth Park, bet. Avenue Sdi * Numbered very ine- Aster Place and 4th. jularly. Eighth LAIGHT, fm 125 Ca- Rt. Left. 1 JAY, from 61 Hudson, Twenty 1st west to North River. nal, w. to N. River. Twenty 2d \Ri. Left. 2 ^\ Canal Twenty 3d 1 2 Hudson Twenty 4th 7 6 Siaple 1 1 St. John's La. Twenty 5th 2i 20 Greenwich Ch. Sq. Varick &c. 25 26 Washington 40 Sq. Hudson LEYDENPLACE.on the Bowery, f m Ele- venth to Thirteenth. 32 Caroline .53 Coilister 49 50 West 66 65 Greenwich JEFFERSON, fm 217 76 77 Washington LIBERTY, from 76 JJivision to E. River. 94 93 West Maiden Lane, west to \Rt. Left. LAURENS, from 112 . N. River. 2 I Division Canal, n. to Ainity. Rt. Left 10 11 E. Broadway Rt. Left. 2 1 Canal \ 2 Maiden Lane 20 21 Henry 13 12 William 1 2S 31 Madison 28 29 Grand 51 40 Nassau 1 40 41 Monroe 54 57 Broome 57 .58 op L'le Green ' .W :u Cherry 90 89 Spring 77 78 Broadway L70 71 Water 124 125 Prince 88 'J'emple STREUT DIRKCTORY 14? I 08 Trinity Place :i23 l'J4 (Jro.iiwicli I 1137 lijs \V';,sliii)-lon I ■HT 14^ Wc.-r ! rJSI'ENARD.fmlTS VV. Hrt):idwav. east to ''.romiw.iy. i , . jAt. , I - 1 W. Bioadwny ;;:i 'M Oliiirrii , :•-' (;;t Broad wnv I MTTLE GKEE^r, I'm 57 Liberty, north ) Maiden Luiie. i V. Lrft. 1 i> Liberty { 1 1 1-2 Miiidrn Finne i I-ITTLK WATER, ;roi!! 58 Crots, iionh V) Anthony. j ■■■. Left. \. 1 Cross ! ^ l. r> Anlfiony I LURrLLARD PL A., I on \\a>hin'.'ton, I'rom I Ch:irh -i to I'crry. LI'DLOVV. from 294 Walker n.to Honston 111. J.eft. — "l Walker I — Division ■;■> r?l ilfsler I G) (;rand I I 81 Rroome 104 1115 Ikh.nry jL-Ji) 1-27 Riviii-ion \m 15'.t ytaiit.;n Ht4 l>-K" Librrty. south to Tin- M..-y. '■tv Liberty ■Z -Cedar ' J Thnnies ;■< Jlroior f.7 Alley ;iO 5t| Tin pot Alley I jMACDOUGAL, fVom I I!I5 E^priiig, nortli to r Eighth. /./. Left . 2 I yprintr 15 Vandam 21) ('linrlton 'M Prince 57 Kmt; 73 7'.} Ilon>ton "I lOfl Hhrcker II l-.".l Minejia Lane l.'l'.l Aniily I 1.-7 r<,nrlli --■ l.>' iVinow - 174 W.iv.ily P!. > VX\ Eiglilh IVIADISON COURT, opens at 219 iMadi son stnet. MADISON AV.,frorn 2!'d street, bi-t. Ave's 4tli and 5i!i MADISO.X, from 420 Pearl, eabl to Gtand. Rt. J J ft. ■2 I Pearl 4 3 op. Chestnut 1J 11 Roosevelt :54 :i7.I:tines 48 45 Oliver «2 (il Carhnrine 112 111 Market 1:^7 ilinningham 142 14.3 Pd;e lc'4 l>-:] Riitirers 21(1 '..'()!' J, li". rson 240 2J9 Clinton 2r4 2().| Montgomery 278 277 (joiivirneur 21)2 25>1 treamn)el 344 :M3 Wiijcut 370 3!il Grand MAIDILV LANE, fm 172 Broadway, s^outh- eust to Eiirit River. Kt. Left. 2 I Broadway 20 1*1 oil. Lit. Green 28 2<> Nassau (S2 fi5 Wiilifim 76 81 op Liberty 87 (iold inr, 105\p,arl 132 V.^■^ Water 14t> 147 Fro'it KiH W^ i^outii MANGL\, from .554 Grand, north to E. R. Rf. Lrft 2 1 Grand 14 13 Uroonic 42 41 D.iiancy 74 75 Hivinston 95 .Stanton 115 Hous-on MANHATTAN, from .55Hou>lon vv.toN.R. lit. Left. 2 1 Honston 12 13Tliird MAN HA IT AN PL. from 8 Elm, \ve.«t and south to Reside. Rt. Lrft. I 2 Elm 23 22 Keadft MARION, iVom broonie, nortli. Rt. Left. I -i Mroomo 33 32Spr:n(,' 71 72 Prince 89 88 MARKET, fmMDi vision, s. to Soutli. Rt. Left. 1 2 Division >E. Broadway 40G 1 2 11 8 Ch. 14'Henry 2i) ?rZ Madi.son 47 48 Monroe 51 Hamilton 71 68 Cherry 83 74 Water «)3 8fj SoMth MARKErF[ELD,rm 74 Broad street, w. to Whitehall. Rt. Ltft. 1 2 Broad .33 32 Whitehall MECHANIC ALL'Y, from 84 Monroe to Ci.erry, bet. Market and Pike xMECHANICPL.,rm tlie riglit of Avenue A, between Second and 'J'hird streets. MEEKS COURT, rear 45 Broad. MERCER, Pin 5G Ca nal, nortii to Eighth. Rt. Left. •2 j Cunal 4 5 op. Howard 32 33 Grand 52 53 Broome 78 7i) Spring 104 113 Prince 144 145 Houston 178 179 Bleecker 218 217 Amity 23G 235 Fourth 248 249 Washing'n PI. 2(;0 259 Waverly PI 2^'2 Clinton PI. Rth MERCHANTS' C'T, rear 48* E.xcl^ange PI. MINETTA, from 205 Bleecker, north to Mi- netta liane. Rt. Lri't. 2 1 Bleecker 18 1!) Minrtia Lane MINETTA LA., from 130 MacdouKul. west to Avenue Gill. Rt. Left. 2 I Maedf)Ufral IH 19 Minetia ' ) 28 27 Av(niiefilli i MONROE, fm 7(iCa-] tharine. (>. to E. K. | Rt. Left. I 2 1 Cathorino 148 STREET DIRECTORY. [] 47 Market MULBERRY, fm 148 58 59 Broome 44 Hamilton C h a t h a m, north to 82 81 Delancy 92 93 Pike Bleecker. 106 107 Rivjiigton 114 117 op. Pelham Rt. Left. 134 133 Stanton 11:18 139 U utters 172 173Jeflerson 2 1 Chatham 162 161 Houston 28 29 Cross NOKTH MOORE, fm '242 241 Clinton 70 73 Bayard 147 VV. Broadway, w. 310 30.4 Montgomery 96 97 Walker to Nortii River. :m 331 Gouverneur 128 127 Hester Rt. Left. ,340 339 Scummd 150 151 Grand 1 2 W. Broadway 394 395 Walnut 182 181 Broome 15 14 Varick i430 M. Corlears 212 213 Spring 53 54 Hudson '450 557 op. Grand iMONTGOMERY, Tm 254 255 Prince 79 78 Greenwich 271 Jersey 91 92 VVa,.h;ngton 277 Division, soulli to 282 283 Houston 105 104 West East Kiver. 306 313 Bleecker NYACK PL., rear 31 m. Left. MURRAY, from 247 Bethune, 4 houses. 2 1 Division Broadway, w. to N. OAK, from 390 Pearl. a 7 E. Broadway River. east to Catharine. 16 15 Henry Rt. Left. 1 2 Broadway Rt. Left. 32 31 Madison 1 'i Pearl 52 51 Monroe 33 Col. Church 6 Chestnut 72 71 Cherry 59 " W. Broadway 17 16 Roosevelt 82 81 Water 87 84 Greenwich 37 38 James 92 91 South 97 94 Washington 49 48 Oliver jMORE, from No. 30 113 112 West 59 58 Catharine Pearl, south to East NASSAU, from 10 OLD SLIP, from 106 River. Wall, n to Chatham. Pearl, south to E. R. Im. Left. 2 1 Wall Rt. Left. i 2 1 Pearl 14 13 Pine 7 4 Pearl 12 11 Water 24 25 Ced-.r 19 20 Water 22 25 Front 42 41 Lihtrty 25 26 Front 36 37 South 56 55 Maiden Lane 33 36 South MORRIS, from 25 70 69 John OLIVER, from 187 Broadway, west to N. 90 91 Fulton Chatham, south to £. River. 104 103 Ann River. Rt. Left. 134 137 Beekman Rt. Left. 2 1 Broadway 152 151 Spruce 1 2 Chatham 12 13 Greenwich 166 Frankfort 16 Henry 16 17 Washington NEW, from 5 Wall, s. 33 34 Madison West to Beaver. 59 58 Oak MORTON, from 260 Rt. Left. 83 84 Cherry Bleecker, west to N. I 2 Wall 95 94 Water River. 27 28 Exchange PI. 103 104 South Im.Left. 79 60 Beaver ORANGE, from 116 1 2 Bleecker NINTH, from 125 Av. Chatham, n.to Grand. 1 2 Chatham 29 Ch. Bedford D, west to Av. 6th 59 70 Hudson Avenue D 25 26 Cross 87 90 Greenwich " C 39 Anthony 46 Leonard 97 98 Washington B 115 114 West A 66 Franklin MOTl\ from No. 178 1st 71 72 op. Bayard 82 White Chatham street, north 2d to Bleecker. 188 " 3d 101 102 Walker Rt. Left. Stuyvesant 131 130 Hester 2 I Chatham 196 191 Bowery 1.57 160 Grand 21 Cross 204 203 Broadway ORCHARD, from. 146 38 35 op. Pell 48 51 Bayard 248 249 University PI. Division, n. to Hous- Avenue 5th ton. 80 81 Walker 3.36 335 " 6th Rt. Left. no 113 Hester NORFOLK, from 204 2 1 Division 142 141 Grand Division, n. to Hous- 8 9 Walker 168 169 Broome ton. 40 39 Hester 192 191 Spring Rt. Left. 66 65 Grand 218 217 Prince 2 1 Division 80.^ 81 Broome 1260 261 Houston 14 13 Hester 108" 107 Delancy 284 279 Bleecker 36 39 Grand 130 135 Rivington TREKT DIRKCTORY 149 102 163 Stanton 1S)4 i;i5 Hoiist.in PARK ROW. from No. 1 Ann street, eiist to Sj)rufe. Rt. Left. 1 ji Ann 34 S Beekmnn 36 i- Spruce PARK PLACE, from '237 Broadway, west to Churcli. Rt. Left 1 M Broadway ■n as Cimrch PELL, from -Jd Bow ery, wtsl to Mott. Rt. Left. 2 1 Bowery 15 Doytr 36 35 Mott PERRY, from No. 62 Greenwich A v., west to North River. Rt. Lift. 1 2 Greenwich Av 17 22 Factory 45 50 Fourtli 77 Bleecker 93 Hudson il5 PEARL, rni 14 State l(i7 lOH (;reenwich east, then north to 131 134 Wasiiington Rt. Left. 2 Broadway I Broadway. Rt. Left. 1 2 1 State ! 24 23 Whiffhail I 30 31 op. More I 52 53 Broad I 66 71 Coonties Slip I 107 William ,106 Old Slip I — 121 Hanover 146 141 Beaver ,152 14it Wall 168 169 Pine 1H6 IHl Cedar ,194 197 Mail Frankfort 370 .3(17 Hiii-Mi.- 1390 3'.M .,i>. Oak 1404 399 \ !ui(ie water t 421 U<..-e 1420 iMiidison 448 447 William 464 4ti5 Chatliam 4H6 4ri5 Ciiy Hall PI. 500 505 Cross 512 511 Centre 540 533 J*.m 576 575 Broadway PECK SLIP, from No. PRINCE 312 Pearl street, east Bowery, to South. I doiigal Rt. Left. Rt. Lif 2 1 Pearl 14 19 Water 28 33 Front 44 45 South PELHAM, from 114 Ch. Monroe, s. to Cherry. I 67 Rt. Left. 81 2 1 Monroe I 93 l.-)9 ItUi West PIKK. Iroui 139 Divi sion, i-outh to E. K. Rt. Lift. 2 1 Division 8 7 E. Broadway 24 21 Henry 40 .37 Madison 56 57 Monroe 74 75 Cherry 82 85 Water 96 97 South PINE, fm 106 Broad- ay, east to E. 11. 15 14 Nas^;au 47 46 William 79 78 P.url 85 84 Water 91 90 Front 99 100 South PITT, from 432 Grand: north to Houston- Rt. Left. 2 I Grand 18 17 Broome 46 Cli. 1). laiicy 76 81 liivjugion 1(10 101 Suuiton l->^ )-J7 limistcm iPLA'lT, Pm 222 Pearl I west to William. Rt. Lift. I 1 2 Pearl 2.3 20 G..ld I 39 40 William 'm No 232 est to Muc- ft. 2 Bowery 12A i;iizahet.h Molt Mulherry Marion Cro.-,hy Broiirlway Mercer 58 21 Ctierry 1109 110 Greene 125 124 Wooster 143 142 Laurens 1.57 156 Thompson 173 174 Sullivan 189 188 Macdougal RANDAL PLAtfE. In Ninth street, com- mencing at Broadway and ending at Uuiver- sity Place READE, from 23 Cen- tre, west to N. R. Rt. Lift. 2 1 Centre 16 13 op. Elm 34 37 op. Manh'nPl. 54 57 Broadway 84 85 Church 110 111 W. Broadway — 129 Hudson 160 157 Greenwich 174 175 Washington So. 197 West KECTOR. fm No. 69 Broadway, west to N. River. Rt. Left. Cli. Ch. Broadway 2 3 Lumher 12 13 Greenwich 22 21 Washington 30 29 West RENWICK, from 220 Canal, n. to Spring. Rt. Left. 2 1 Canal 44 45 Spring REPUBLICAN AL. See Manhattan PI. RIDGE, from 288 Di- vision, 11. to Houston. Rt. Left. 2 1 Division 8 7 Grand 24 27 Broome 44 43 Delaiicy 76J 75 Hiviii'-'ton 102i 105 Stanton 130 129 Houston RlVINGTON,t"m 215 Bowery, e. to E. R Rt. Left. 1 2 Bowery 17 18 Cl.rystie 32 F<>r^yth 50 Eld ridge 68 Allen 84 Orcliard 98 Ludlow 1 16 E>sex 130 Norfolk 146SiitVolk 162 Clinton IW) .Attorney 196 Ridge 216 Pitt 234 Willett 33 i 49 69 83 97 115 127 145 163 181 195 215 233 |1 50 STREET n |25l 252 Sheriff !2ti7 '2G8 Columbia 285 288 Cannon :{05 306 Lpvvis 319 320 Goerck 335 336 Mangin 357 Tompkins 303 Tomp's Court 3t>5 East ROBINSON, from 4 College Place west to North River. Rt. Lrft. 3« College Place 51 48 Greenwich til (JO Washington 75 70 West ! ROOSEVELT, from 135 Chatham, south to E. R. Rt. Left. 1 2 Chatham 41 42 Madibon (57 m Oak Ch. 82 Batavia 101 100 Cherry 117 114 Water 133 Front 143 12G South ROSE, from 34 Frank- fort, n. e. to Pearl. Rt. Left. I 2 Frankfort 31 28 Duane 57 50. Pearl RUTGERS, from 191 Division, s. to E. R. RECTORY, 2d 1st A B C SECOND, from 323 P.owery, e. to E. R. Rt. Left. 1 2 Bowery 37 3(> Avenue 97 98 147 148 203 204 257 258 2SJ7 Sheriff M. 3)4 Avenue D M. 314 fiouston SEVENTH, from 40' Bowery, e. to E. R. Rt. Left. 2 1 Bowery Avenue 3d 10 Hall Place 40 37 Avenue 2d 72 •' 1st 1U8 Sq. " A Sq. '• B C D Rt^ Left, Division 3 E. Broadway 13 Henry 31 Madison 47 Monroe 57 (.^herry 69 Water 81 South RUTGERS' PLACE, in Monroe street from Jefferson to Clinton. Rt. Left. 1 Jefferson 27 Clinton RYDER'S ALLEY, 240 239 254 255 liBwis SHERIFF, from 46^ Grand, north to Hous- ton. Rt. Left 2 ! Grand 20 19 Broome 44 43 Delancy 70 71 Riviui^tou 100 99 Stanton 120 127 Huusion M. 131 SfH-.Hui SIXTH, frn :W7 Bow- ery, ettst to E. R. Rt. LiJt. I .tjt. 2 Bowery 4 Hall Place 30 Avenue 2d 62 1st A B C 381 ?,S2 " D 397 394 Lewis SMITH, from 14 Ha- mersley, s. to King. Rt. Left. 1 2 Hamersley 9 8 Kin fm «« Fulton to Gol.r. i^MITH CO'T.. Smith SCAMMEL, fvom440| ^j.^hetween Kn.g and Grand, s. to Water, Rt. Left Grand 2 E Broadway 8 Henry 22 Madison 32 Monroe 50 Cherry 58 Water 11 23 33 51 59 SCOTT'S AL'Y 71 Franklin. fm mer-lev S <>U T H , from fi5 Whitehall, e.toGouv- ernenr Slip. Rt. Left. 1 Whitehall 7 More 14 Broad 23 Coenties Slip 28 Cnyler's Alley 39 Old Slip 48GouverneurL. 53 Jones's Lane 58 Wall (18 Pnio 70 Depeyster 75 Maiden Lane 77 Fletcher 87 Burling Slip 93 Fulton 104 Beekman 118 Peck Shp 162 Dover lT.';6np. Macdougal 201 202 Clarke 229 230 Varick 261 262 Hudson 287 286 Greenwich 301 M. Washington 317 M. West SPRUCE, from 151 Nassau, southeast to Gold. Rt. Left. 2 1 ^aspau 22 21 William 44 43 Gold STANTON, from 247 Bowerv, e. to E. R. Kt. Left. I 2 Bowery 25 24 (^hrystie 39 40 Forsvth 59 58 Eldridge 71 72 Allen 89 88 0rcl,urcl 101 102 LuiJiow 119 120 Esstx 135 i:W Norlcik 147 ISOtfiitr.jlk Hi?.. 1G8 ("Imton 185 182 Attorney 199 200i;it]ge 217 21H Pitt 2:« 2:y \Vi licit 25:{ 2.o4 Shirill" 267 2r.,S(\.lnn,hia 2^7 ',V4 <';:iM,.,ii tfTAM'U.N i'LACE, opens at 4 Stain on bi. ai)d contuiiis I) liouse.s. ■STAPLE, t'lnltiitDu- I ane, n. to Harrison. ■RL Left. I 2 Duaiie Jny ' P Harrison STATE, from A'o. 48 WlntoJiall west, ijicii north to Broadway. lit. Left. 1 t Whitd.all 14 S Pearl 15 a Bridge 20 CO Howjinp Grern ST. JOHN'S LAiNE,] from 9 Beacii, noith to Laiglii. Rt. Left. 1 Beach 9 York 15 Laiffht ST. MARIC'S PLA., in Ei-'hth st. between Av. 3d and Av. A. Rt. Left. 2 1 Avenue 3d 38 37 86 85 128 127 STONE, fro Wliilel.alJ, . liam. Rt. Left 2 1 Whitehall 20 25 Broad 770 'I'roy to ('liristopher. 396 Amos 781 7dv'.laiie Rt. J.,fi. 40-1 Charles 71i9 Hurntio \ 2 Broadway 415 Perry 813 (jMiisovoort 11 10 Mercer 428 Hammond WASHLXG'IO.N PL., 23 22 Greene 448 Bank Iroiu 713 IJioaiiwuy. {]n. 32 VVooster 474 Hethune west to VVousler. m. Left. Wash. lUni versify PI. Siiuarc. J Avenue 5lh 4i>2 Troy 504 Jane 1 2 Broadway .520 Horatio Mercer 101 98 Macdo«?al .538 Gansevoort 17 18 (i ret no 133 130 Avenue Glh 570 Avenue UHh Un. Ch. VVoostrr 141 144 (Jay W. BROADWAY, VVASHLNGTOX SQ. 151 ].5l> Factory from .59 Murray, n. to ill VVavtrly Place, 108 Grove Canal. frontiiis tlie Parade GrouiKl. Disptiis'y Curistopher VVEEllAWKE.X.rcar Rt. Left. 1 2 Murray lit. Left. ol Greeiiwicli Market, 35 3() Warren 1 University PI. and between Gliristo- 42 Chambers l.l Avenue 5th pher and Amos. 55 Reade 29 Macdouijal Rt. Left. 70 Duane VVATEK.iroin.'?o.43 M. 1 Amos 85 82 Thomas Whitehall, east to E. M. 13 Christopher 101 ItH) Anihony River. WESLEY PLA. lx\ 113 110 Leonard Rt. Lfft. Muliturry from Hous- 135 132 Franklin 1 2 Whitehall ton tr, Bleecker 1 13 142 White 5 () More WEST, fVorn the Bat- 147 148 North Moore 23 24Bruad tery north to Av. 10th 154 Beach 49 50 (^uyler's Alley Rt. L,ft. ]59 Walker 175 174 Lispenard 73 70 Old Slip 1 Battery Place t»3 96 GouveriieurL. 23 ftlorris 185 York .15 no Wall 57 Rector 190 Canal .. t 13-2 Pine 80 Carlisle WEST COURT, from ' I ) 140 Dcprystnr 87 Albany Twenty-second north . 1 1.5-.^ Maiden Lane 94 Cedar to Avenue Otii. ' 'J 15« Fletcher 104 Liberty W. EIGHTEENTH. . ) 180 Burling S:ip 115 Coitlandt from Avenue 5th, w. ,":! 204 Fulton 122 Dey 130 Ful'on to N. R. ■.;:'J 228 Beekman Rt. Left. ■:..l 258 Peck rilip 138 Ves,:y I 2 Avenue 5th ::\) 278 Dover 147 Barclay 63 64 " 6th :;JI 322 Roosevelt 159 Robinson 7th '■:{ 3C)2 James Shp 107 Murray 191 180 " 8th :',) 3-:h Oliver 17(5 Warren 239 238 " 9th 11 32 >1arktt 188 Reade North River 171 ITU I'ik.' 190 Duane W. FOUin'EEN'lH, '.i:i 5)4 KiitL'crs 198 Jay from Avenue 5th, w. .x\ r:M .i.n'i r>on 200 Ilarri.<;on to N. River. ,V, :,.-,(! CI, ninri 215 Franklin Rt. Left. . ■') .');ir» Monimirnpry 2-24 IVorih Moore I 2 Avenue 5th .!:! r.iH ..(). (iuuv.shp 233 T{(-ach 71 70 " fith \I. ti30 S.aii,r.i.-1 240 Hubert 127 120 " 7ih ■ ■7 0^4 Walnut 254 Luight 173 172 " 8th :> 7:tt) Corl.'urs 204 Vestry Hudson > 1. 750 Fast 273 Desbrosses 227 Avenue 9th VATTS, trom34Sul 281 Watts " 10th iivnn, west to N. R. 293 Ilobokcn North River ' /. Left. M. Canal W. FIFTEENTH, fm •> 1 Sullivan ,- 300 Spring Avenue 5th, west to , 30 29 Varick <^ 321 Charlton N. River. <, fi4 63 Hu(i>on 332 King Rt. Left. 62i fi7i('anal 342 HnmerBloy 1 2 Avenue 5th 1 74 75 Greenwich 354 Clarkson " 6th 154 STREET DIRECTORY. 125 Avenue 7th 183 184 " 8th 9th " 10th W. NINETEENTH, from Avenue 5tli, w. to N. River. Rt. Left. 1 2 Avenue 5th 6th 119 120 " 7ih 185 1H« " 8th 247 248 " 9th " 10th W.SEVENTEENTH from Avenue 5tli, w. to N. River. Rt. Left. 1 2 Avenue 5th 67 " 6th 129 132 " 7th !l99 193 " 8th 249 250 " 9th '• lOtii North River VV. SIXTEENTH, fm Avenue 3th, west to Nortli River. Rt. Left. 1 2 Avenue 5th 6lh 123 124 " 7th 183 184 " 8ui 241 242 •* iitn , " 10th North River W. THIRTEENTH, from Avenue 5th, w. I to Nortd River. \Rt. Left. 1 2 Avenue 5th 73 74 " 6th !l25 126 " 7in !183 nOGreenvvicliAv. il85 Avenue Sih I " 9th " lOih North Eivpr IW. TWENTIE'J'H, I from Avenue 3tli, w. I to North River. \Rt. Lift. 1 2 .\venue 5th 17 etone 73 74 '• (th 25 Britlt-e !2I I'JO " 7th 34 33 I'parl 179 178 '• 8th 43 Water 224 yth 48 atule 294 Avenue 10th 302 North River W. TWENTY F'ST, from Avenue 5th, w. to North River. Rt. Left. 1 2 Avenue 5th 75 76 " 6th 123 124 " 7th 189 190 " 8th P. E. " 9th Sem. " 10th North River W. TWENTY S'ND, from Avenue 5th, w. to North River. Rt. Left. 1 2 Avenue 5th 6th 7th 189 190 " 8th 243 230 " 9th " 10th Nortli River W. TWENTY T'RD, from Avenue 5th, w. to north River. Rt. Left. 1 2 Avenue 5th 6th 7t,h 8th 9ih " 10th North River \V. WASHINGTON I'LA. {^vt Barrow.) WHITE, from 142 W. B'civvay, e. to Orange. Rt. Ltft. 1 2 W. Broadway 33 32 Church 73 66 Broadway 75 78 Cortlandt A. 95 96 Ehii 115 116 Ctntre 131 136 Orange Wnn^EHAEL, from 32 Markettieid, south to E. River. lit. Lift. 2 1 Mn rketfield C 51 Front ^ 65 South WILLETT from 450 Grand, to Houston. Rt. Left. 2 1 Grand 18 17 Broome 42 41 Delancy 74 75 Rivington 102 105 Stanton 134 135 Houston WILLIAM, from 65 Stone, n. e. to Pearl Rt. Left. 1 Stone 2 Pearl 7 South William 6&16 1 1 Beaver 28 29 Exchange PI. Ex. 43 Wall 54 53 Pine 62 63 Cedar 78 77 Liherty 84 83 Maiden Lane 92 Piatt 108 109 John 140 141 Fulton 1.56 157 Ann 170 171 Beekman 180 183 Spruce 204 203 Frankfort 238 239Duane 272 273 Pearl WOOSTER, from 92 Canal, north to Wa veriy Place. Rt. Left. 2 1 Canal 28 29 Grand 52 55 Broome 90 87 Spring 126 121 Prince 164 159 Houston 192 189 Bleecker 210 209 L. cal'd Amity Place 224 225 Amity 248 241 Fourth Ch. Sq. Washington Pli Un.Sq. WaverlyPl. YORK, from No. 9 St. John's Lane, east to: West Broadway. Rt. Left. 2 1 St. John's La. I 14 17 W Broadway ADVERTISEMENTS. HENRY JESSOP, iMPOP.TEn o:f JOSEPH GILLOTT'S PENS, 91 JOHN STREET, Corner of Gold Street NEW YORK. L A Lar^e Stock of the above, toi^ethcr with WIN- DLE'Sancl R. I^IOSLEY & CO.'S (London) PENS AND PEN-HOLDERS, constantly on hand. 156 ADVERTISEMENTS. M A m F §o MANUFACTURERS OF THE IMPROVED PATENT 332 aaoiial ilctters patent, 5Lon"Cion. ESTABLISHED ISIO. (many yfars with erard.) J. F. Browne respectfully informs his Friends and the Musical World, that he lias establisiied himself for the manufacture and im- portation of these very beautiful instruments, at 281 Broad^iay, & 73d CSiasnbers-st., N.Y. His arrangements are such as to enable him to transact business at European prices, thereby sivirig purchasers the high duties im- posed by tariff on these Instruments. J. F. IJrowne wonld observe, these Harps are constructed on the most improved principles, with all thn modern improvements of London and Paris, are unequalled in brilliancy of tone, fineness of touch, and perfectness of mechanism. Particular care is taken to fit them for the extremes of climate in this country, in which respfct they will be found far superior to any of European manufacture, imported in the usual way. These Harps are patronised by the elite of musical taste and pro- fessional talent in Europe; amonu the latter, lie would mention N. C. Bochsa, who invariably selects from this establishment. J. F. Biowne begs to offer the opinions of some of the first profes- sional talent in this country. PRINTERS' FURNISHING WAREHOUSE. WELLS &. "WEBB, No. 32 Ann street, A'ew-York, MANTFACTtRERS OF WOODTYPE, CASES, STANDS, FfTRNiTURE, GALLEYS, &c. ALSO, DEALERS IN NEW & SECOND HAND PRLNTrNG MATERIALS, & EVERY ARTICLE NECESSARY FOR A PRINTLXG OFFICE Heads of Newspapers neatly engraved. Eoxvood and Alalio^any prepared for Engravers. DARIUS WELLS. E. RUSSELL WEBB. ■ a ADVERTISEMENTS. ? 57 138 Wiiliam-streetj New-York^ IMPORTER OF FRENCH AND ENGLISH STAPLE AND FAXCY STATIO^'ERY, MA^XFACTUREE OF THE PATENT IVORY SURFACE, PLAYINa VISITING, AND BUSINESS CARDS, i THE TRADE ARE ASSURED, T{IAT THEY CAN PURCHASE GOODS AT THIS ESTABLISHMENT, AS WELL, IF NOT Br:TT.:il, THAN AT ANY OTHER HOUSE I.NF TME UXITED STATES. jFuII SKssortmcnt a \b:ivs on Ji^anti, 158 ADVERTISEMENTS. WUI%'I%S & CI.AKK HAVING PURCHAS- ED the Patent Right for " Coleman's jEolian Attach- ment to the Piaiw-Forte" for the entire United States {excepting Massachusetts,) announce to the public that they are now prepared to supply Piano-Fortes with this improvement attached, or to attach the same to any mo- dern made horizontal Piano-Fortes. In regard to the durabilit}' of this invention, N. &- C. are fully prcp'rired to satisfy the most prejudiced mind, their own critical examinations and experiments warrant them in the assertion, that the " uEolian^' will remain in tune in any climate, and it will not be affected bv transi- tions of atmosphere. The most satisfactory v;arrantee is given with each instrument. The public are invited to examine the " ^Eolian Piano- Fortes" at their wareroom. No. 240 Broadway, opposite the Park. Where also may be found an assortment of 5, (i^, and 7 octave Piano-Fortes, both in rosewood and ma- hogany cases. UTTER'S NEW PATENT HOT AIR AND AIR TIGHT (D®iiIL AEm w®®m SW®¥3g, FOR HEATING APARTMENTS. ALSO HIS CELEBRATED COAL&\A/'OOD For 1845—6. WITH A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF THE LATEST PATTERNS OF PARLOUR STOVES, FOR WOOD OR COAL, «ffi;|)0lcsrle anti aaetat!, I)S S. UTTER & CO., 233 Water-street, third door east of Beekmsn, NEW-YORK. ADVERTISEMENTS. 159 COLT'S REPEATING PISTOLS, With the latest Improvements o/l814 and 1845. The above is a trn« represen- tation of Colt's Patent Repeating Pistol: whici) is acknowledged to be superior in every lespect to any other Pistol niunuAictured in this country or Europe. The Texan Army and Navy are sup- plied with them, and ihe United States Navy has been supplied with thein to some extent, and the officers Jiave given a most favourable report of Colt's Re- peating tire arms. Great impo- sitions have lately been practised vpon the public by representing and selling the six Barrel or Self CocL-uig Pistol as Colt's Patent Pistol. The Colt's Re peating Pistols, Carbines, and Shot Guns are sold for Cash at reduced prices at No. 2, Barclay-st, Astor House, New- York ; by Proprietor. W. H. HORSTMANN & CO., JIaiiien Lane. HYDE & GOUURlCrJE, Chartrcsst., ^Vtzc Orleans. and by MULFORD & WENDELL, Broadtcay, Albany. 160 ADVERTISEMENTS. WILLIAM RADDE, IMPORTER. BOOKSELLER, AND PUBIJSIIER OF IIOMduOFATIliC BOOMS, ATSB GENERAL AGENCY OF T.1IE CENTRAL HOMEOPATHIC PHAHMACY AT LEfPSICj WHO HAS CONStTANTLY FOR SALE, HomcEOpalbJc Medicines in boxes for Fa.fiiiJy use, PliysieJaas', &s. also, jn single vi;i!s. Hrtmoeop.jtljic CUocolale, J. H. COLXON, MAP PUBLISHER, No. 86 CEDAR -STREET, NEW-YORK. MAF§ I.^ C5KEAT VAKIS^TV, In rdountcJ aiid Forcablc Form, v.t Wholesale and Retail. GENTLEMEN'S [F^iK]0@G^M[i[L[E /aFF/^llL AND FURNISHING WAREHOUSE. 31 John-Street, corner of Nassau. CLOTHS, IViSSIMERES, AND VESTINGS, The chnice?t selection in tlie city of Frencii biack and fancy- coloured Uioiley ;ind oliier Cloths and Cassinieres, rich embroidered ('ashmere and Satin Vestings ; also, fancy Woollen Velvets and rich evening patienis, in great variety, carifiilly selected from the latest importations. Also, a large tmd varied stock of GENTLEMEN'S FUHNLSHINGS. Chosson's celebrated Paris Kid Gloves, Robes de Chnmbre, new styles of Scarfs, Cravats, Neck Ties, Handkerchiefs, Shirts, Under do. and Drawers, of every description and quality. Also, Canes, [Jmbrellas, Perfumeries, &c., &c., all of which will be sold at the lowest rates. N. B. Particular attention paid to Navy and Military Uniforms. Tiie public are respectfully invited to call and examine our new and beautiful stock of seasonable goods, before purchasing else- where. ADVERTISEMENTS. 10 3 iili:i«*{'«\"w'; ^^fe, G. EDWARDS, MANUFACTIKER OF HALL L ANTE [INS, WITH STAINED OR CUT GI.ASS. ORNAMENT IJi STREETLA.^ITERNS, wi^^^ gas ^g tiir- COACH LAMPS &C. ORNAMENTAL STAINED GLASS WINDOWS, DOMES, DOORS, 86 SKY-LIGHTS, Made to Order. No. 116 Nassau-street. BetAvceu Aim and Bcckiuaii Stroi tm^ NEW-YORK. GLASS BENT for Clocks, barometers, Bow Windowe, &c., &c< I^amps nnri Plnted Wore repaired, 162 ADVERTISEMENTS. ©E@[E ¥= @[§ M MEN'S, BOrS", AND CHILDREN'S (DIL(DTPIHmif© SlPOIEIl, No. 110 Chatham-street, (N. E. corner Pearl-street ) Will keep constantly on hand a full assortment of Men's, Boys', and Children's Clothing, of all descriptions, to which he would re- spectfully invite the attention of those in want. Ashe has made arrangements to receive CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, VESTINGS, &c. BY EVERY PACKET, AND HAS SECURED THE SERVICES OP EXPERIENCED CUTTERS, He pledges himself to give perfect satisfaction to all who may pur- chase. 95" Garments made to order at the shortest notice, and withl strict punctuality. ADVERTISEMENTS. 163 SURGICAL AND DENTISTS^ INSTRUMENTS, TRUSSES, MANUFACTURED BY WHILILIIiiSa Eo ©DiniLllDHH©, No. 5T Chatham-street, opposite Chambers. Steam Manufactory, No. 29 Ann-street. MA.>'UFAC'rX:RER. of all sorts of Surgical and Dental In- struments, Cutlery, &c., &;c. ; viz., Amputating, Trepanning, Litho- tomy, Couching, Cupping, Pocket, Dissecting, Strabismus, Mid- wifery, Phlebotomy, Teeth Instruments, &c. ' Plain and improved Scarificators, with shifting blades, Instru inents for Restoring Suspended Animation, Inflating the Lungs, &c. Improved Clyster Apparatus, and all kinds of Pewter and White Metal Syringes, Silver and Gum Catheters, Bougies for (Esophagus, Rectum, and Urethra, of Metal and Gum Elastic. Splints to the form of the leg or arm, and all other sorts ; Frac- ture Machines, and apparatus for Deformities ; Umbilical and Spring Trusses; Bag and Riding Belts; Suspensories and Bandages. A new and Improved Abdominal Supporter ; Thumb and Spring bleeding Lancets ; Wood, Metallic and Gum Elastic Nipple Shields. j Pill Machines, and Medicine Chests of every description : Tonsil In- ! struments of several new improvements, by eminent surgeons of New York. Dr. Joseph T. Pitnr'v's Patent Speculum Ani and Le- vater, and all other kinds of Spcculums: Apparatus for Curved Spine and other Deformities. Stromeyer & Detmold's improved Chib Foot Boards; Drs. Scarpa's, Little's, A. C. Post's, and Buck's improved Club Foot Shoes: Razors, Scissors, Shears and Knives. Particular attention paid to all repairs of Cutlery and Instruments, and e.\ecuted with neatness and despatch. To whom it may concern— This is to certify tiiat we have been in the liabil of «mi)loying WM. R. GOULDING, as cutler and Instru- nienl maker, and can with confidence recommend his Instruments lu the Faculty of this country. VALENTINE MOTT, M.D. Professor of Surgery in the University of the City of New-York, and Consulting Surgeon to the New York Hospital. ALFRED C. POST, M.D., JOHN C. CHEESMAN, M.D., Surgeons to New York Hospital, {t^ Trusses and Bandages applied. t.-pi ADVERTISEMENTS, SHtiW©©i^S VIBRATORY MAGNETIC MACHINE. THE VIBRA- TORY MOVE- MENT recently substituted for the Rotary, in this Machine, by the subscriber, endows it with an extraordinary superiority over every form in v'hich it has been construcied. It is compactly fitted together with its liallery, wires, and other appliances, in neat mahogany cases, of seve- K;'. ?izps and powers, at $10 (two sizes) $12, $14 and $16 each ; and (<)i warded, to order, to any part of the Union, the Canadas, West I^jidies, or South America. Each case is accompanied with a Manual (7th edition, pp. 224, 32- mo.)— including a complete Manual of the Practice of Medicine, with .1 very full Glossary— giving clear and ample directions for the use i. ilie instrument in the various diseases to which it is applicable, and v;hich are found, by the successful practice of hundreds of operators, .0 include the most prevalent, as Avell as the most peculiar and obsti- .late, that are known to the medical profession ; with tiie proper Medicines for each case. H. H. SHERWOOD, M. D., 102 Chambers-st. New- York. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL BOOKSELLERS, No. 139 Uroad-tvay, New-Xorls;, Execute orders for American and Foreign Books, in all depart- ments of Jjiterature, upon the most favourable terms. Their assort ment of religious works embraces many thousand volumes ; and thei stock of Bibles and Prayer Books is always very extensive. Stranj as well as others, are invited to examine their slock, catalogues ^'1 which can be obtained gratis. I \" -> v^^ -^^^ t » ^ C- *-^ '>»^.\0 ^.^J.-.?^^' LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 220 355 8