Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 83, Ed. 1 Friday, February 6, 1891 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Galveston Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rosenberg Library.
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OF
I
GAMBRINUS HALL,
lESOUti anti. Mechanic Streets
Estimates Furnished. Orders Filled Promptly.
The Guest of the Old Reliable
*
TELEPHONE No. 579.
Meet
Real
Estate
9
Real Estate and Loan Agents,
ALSO REPRESENTATIVES OF
THE LOMBARD INVESTMM'COMPHNI.
OPEN
F. A. PARK.
AUSTIN
<&■
REAL
ESTATE
West Side 22nd Street Bet. Strand and Mechanic.
GALVESTON, TEXAS.
A. M. WASSAM.
l~ '.1
J. A. LABARTHE.
Office 2320, 2318 Market Street,
opposite Girardin House, upstairs.
0. P. RUSSELL, Secretary.
2d—Changing the time of municipal
GALVESTON, TEX,
HI
i
■
ItRAMl
mask!
Office: Upstairs Over Sunny South Building.
HBK««HBmMMB»mjBS«KWJ®insasansTC2»inKnMJca35zs3sssisanffl3Bn5sessa=3^3nTaTC!e5iimc™xsxissuiiiwaE
Gentlemen, Come and
Him.
DURING MARDI GRAS WILL
MAKE HEADQUARTERS
AT
Soil o.od Sand
FOR FILLING LOTS AND STREETS
Furnished by Carload on Track or Delivered in Any Quantity.
C. Jo McRAE, General Contractor
AND
GENTS’FURNISHING GOODS
a
I
.
Galveston, Texas.
HiMarwitz&Co,
Dealers and Importers of Ship Chandlers’
Goods generally, Manilla, Sisal and Cot-
ton Rope. Contractors for Sails, Awn-
ings, Tents, Etc.
IWP———MM—M—M^M—1■■MMW———
APPLICATION
0. M. SHERMAN, President. a. C. DICKSON, Sec’y and Treas.
Galveston and Wichita Real Estate Co.
FREYBE BUILDING, OPPOSITE TREMONT HOTEL.
List Your Property for Sale or Rent With Us.
A. J. OWEN. ’ C. G. CLIFFORD
OWEN & CLIFFORD
HERMANN RADEKER,
Wholesale & Retail Dealer in
f
T
-
1
I
NOTICE
Center bet. Market £ Mechanic.
wsu;aBMQ4iK*5W^riza».tnr«fia«criHiSKtj3uttusMj*m.-4i4aisji,iA'->----- .
LEE IRON WORKS,
C. IS. & CO.,
PROPRIETORS.
MANUFACTURERS OF ALL
KINDS OF
MOM, STBM ENGINES
AND
Brass and Iron Castings.
Repairing Done on Short Notice.
COR. 32d <fc WINNIE STS.,
GALVESTON, TEX.
Furnished Rooms
For Rent—Nicely furnished rooms, cen-
trally located and well ventilated. Prices
low. For further information apply at
Union Beer Hall, No. 66 Market street.
Our stock of Fancy and Staple Groceries
is as large and well selected as any in the
city. If you want pure and unadulterated
Groceries of every description and at the
very lowest figure, call on
* Schneider Bros.
If your Stock is out of Condition and
needs toning up, use Raven’s Food—at
Hanna & Leonard’s. #
CURBS*-
arlington-Miller Lumber
neW yards.
lor
jE Butter, Eggs,
MILK AND GAME.
Prompt Delivery Throughout the Citv. POST-
OFFICE bet. 20th and 2 I st, at the OLD ICE HOUSE
LEONiH. BLUM,
Importers and Wholesale Dealers in
STAPLE AND FANCY
DRY GOODS,
DRESS GOODS,
NOTIONS
TO AMEND THE CHARTER OF THE
CITY OF GALVESTON.
BILLY BUSCHER,
PROPRIETOR.
Ill
I I
->Pir.ES,
AGENTS.
W.ri. griffin. Fred. W. Pickett, Att’y at Law
Griffin & fiekett,
Real Estate Agents,
Mechanic Street, bet. 22d and 23d, Under
Washington Hotel, GALVESTON, Tex.
Are prepared to accommodate all purchasers,
small or larae.
CHAS. A. SCHROEDER.
Notary.
SCHROEDER & LABARTHE,
Real - Estate - Agents,
:-s
LEA,
COMPANY,
THE BANK SALOON
S. W. CORNER PO TOFFICE
AND CENTER STS.
Most Popular Resort in the City.
If you want to find your friend and his party
call upon CHARLIE and JOE at the above ad-
dress and you can find them
A Fine Free Lunch from 10 a. m. Until
2 p. in.
Only the Best of Imported and Domestic
Wines, Liquors and Cigars kept in stock.
CALL AND SAMPLE I HEM.
PETEK TIBOLUI. JOHN PUPPO.
G. B. MAESAN & CO.,
DEALERS IN
Fresh Oysters and Fish,
Market, bet. 19th and 20th Streets. Open
from o a. m. to 6.30 p. in.
P. O. Box 328.
fL SALZMANN,
SWISS WATCHMAKER
And Manufacturing Jeweler.
Dealer in DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRV,
SILVERWARE, CLOCKS, Etc.
Repairing of all kinds skillfully done at mod-
erate rates.
Old Gold and Silver bought.
2217 POSTOFFICE STREET.
P. S. WRE
NOTARY PUBLIC and CONVEYANCER.
Deeds, Releases, Mortgages, Powers of Attorney, etc., written up,
and all Notarial work promptly attended to.
EXAMINATION OF TITLES AND CONTINUATION OF ABSTRACTS WILE
HAVE SPECIAL ATTENTION.
Agent for the Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association
^S^The patronage of everybody respectfully solicited.*^®
OFFICE: WASHINGTON HOTEL BUILDING, NORTHEAST CORNER
TREMONT AND MECHANIC STBEET8.
DEEP WAT. R THE CAUSE.
Duer & Peebles Coma to Galveston and Enter
th® Wood Business.
Duer & Peebles, successors to Wm.
Vowinckle, dealers in Cord and Split
Wood, guarrani.ee prompt Delivery and
Full Measure. Yards Office Twenty-
eight street, between Postoffice and Mar-
ket. Telephone 375.
Beach Hotel.
OPEN ALL THE YEAR.
Rooms with or without board
T. B. Gale, Manager.
’EwESTbFBiEfTAcfW.
WM. BUCHAN, Proprietor,
----- Office and Factory, 19tx
St. and Ave. A.
MOLASSES, OIL,
VINEGAR, C1DEB
LIQUOR, FLOUR and
PRODUCE BARRELS.
HALF-BARRELS
and KEGS.
F. c7 VOIGHT,
Watchmaker and Jeweler,
Also Dealer in
WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY,
Repairing Neatly Done.
2028 Market Street, between 20th and 21st Sts.,
Galveston, Texas.
Office and Headquarters for Chas. C. Voight’s
Military Band.
Use Fly's Blood and Hem Tonic.
THE GREATEST REMEDY OF THE AGE^
For Nervous Debility, Broken Dows
Constitutions and All Impuri-
ties of the Blood.
For sale by all druggists.
■ w s
Hl »
SCOTT * COMPANY,
Real Estate Agents,
506 TREMONT ST., GALVESTON, TEX.,
Call attention to their large and varied list of Business, Residence and Acreage Property,
Investors will find it to their interest to see us before buying elsewhere,
NO MATTER WHAT THEY WANT.
Exchange
In winter more exercise is required
for the body than in summer.
Wear warm underclothing; material
of open texture is preferable.
Avoid catching cold, but should you
develop a cough take immediate steps to
get rid of it.
The most effective remedy for coughs
or colds is Marsden’s Pectoral Balm; it
is pleasant to take and never fails to cure.
Ask your druggist for it and don’t be
persuaded to take any other instead. a
The Galveston High School of Music
srives instructions either private or in
classes on piano, organ, violin, cornet,
zither, banjo, guitar or any other
intrument at lowest prices and by only
the very best teachers. Give us a trial
and you will be convinced. Pupils can
begin any time during the month at the
Galveston High School of Music,
Over C. Janke’s & Go’s Music Store.
Fresh, imported cigars from the famous
a Sabrosa factory, in Havana, at L.
-nlnsia *
A well selected and complete stock of
Grain, Hay, Butter, Cheese and Potatoes
at Hanna & Leonard’s. *
I
so - .. .
J. R. DAVIES. E. B. ROOD, AttV.
WASSAM, DAVIES & ROOD,
Estate flgents
Office: First Floor Tremont Hotel.
KENTS COLLECTED FOE EVERYBODY.
-JSTZEW CFiFIOH.
skirvix Co.
Real Estate Agents,
Have moved their office from Strand to the Northwest Corner of Tremont and Church,
where they will be pleased to give prices, etc., and any information regarding Galveston real
estate.
Don’t Die in the House.
“Rough on Rats.” Clears out rats,
mice, roaches. Rough on Worms. Safe,
s ire cure. 25c. 3
One hundred beautiful Piano Scarfs
and Covers, in all designs and colors,
from $2.50 to $5 at C. Janke & Co’s
Music Store, on Tremont street.
The Model Market, on Center street—
’Phone 388—is now open for business,
and has at all time the Best of Meats.
Corn-fed Fork and All-Pork Sausage a
specialty. *
King Momus
25 Ct??
For Sale by J. J. SHOTT.
mayor or superintendent of streets speci-
fically pointing out the nature and exact
locality of the defect, obstruction or
other thing that afterwards occasions
the injury.
15. Amendment authorizing the City
Council to establish and maintain a
city police, to consist of a chief
•>f nolice, two sergeants, two clerks,
nnving authority to administer all
"•Mtns and affirmations and to sign
vagrants of arrest, affidavits, etc., and
number of patrolmen as the City
"■•ouncil may, from time to time, desig-
i e; to prescribe the duties of police-
ten; to regulate their conduct; to pre-
->rioe the Anode or manner of investigat-
ing or inquiring into charges or com-
plaints against all members of the police
force (except the chief of police) for in-
competency, or inefficiency, for corrup- |
tion, malfeasance or misfeasance in of- |
: flee, or for any other conduct unbecom-
of “theTlleyrin^said Atv I inS a member of the force; and to ap-
.. 4-u-. point from amongst the members of said.
City Council a committee of at least three,
to- be styled “ Police Committee,” with
power to inquire into, hear and deter-
mine such charges or complaints and to
pronounce judgment thereon.
16. Amendment requiring the assess-
ment and collection of taxes for public
school purposes, to be made at the same i
time with the asSesment and collection of
taxes for general purposes.
17. Amendment providing that a gen-
eral notice to the public, by the collec-
tor of taxes for the city, published for
thirty days in the official paper of said
corporation, that taxes for any particu-
lar year, or assessments for any particu-
lar purpose, are due, shall be deemed
sufficient notice to t he taxpayers of said
city.
18. Amendment providing that it shall
be the duty of the mayor, in all cases of
nominations to office by him, to furnish
each aiderman with a list of the names
of the different nominees and the offices
to which they are respectively nominated,
at least twenty-four hours prior to the
meeting at which rhe nominations are to
be submitted to the Council for confirma-
tion.
19. Amendment creating the office of
city sexton, with such salary and with
such powers and duties as the City Coun-
cil may, by ordinance, prescribe.
20. Amendment providing that when-
ever any person shall be removed from
any office, or the term for which he was
elected or appointed has expired, or he
has resigned or ceased to act in such offi-
cial capacity, such person shall deliver
over to his successor all books, papers
and effects in any way appertaining to
his office, and declaring a failure so to
do an offense punishable by fine. Elim-
inating from said charter sections Nos.
31, 155, 157, 173. Rewriting, revising,
renumbering, amending and re-enacting
the following sections of said charter, to-
wit: Nos. 1 to 30, both inclusive; Nos. 32
to 154, both inclusive; No. 156; Nos.
I 158 to 172, both inclusive, and Nos.
177 to 187, both inclusive.
21. Amendment authorizing the city
to construct, own and maintain a line
or lines of poles in and along any of its
streets or ways for the accommodation
of telegraph, telephone, electric and
other wires, and to rent out the
same to any person, corporation or as-
sociation of persons, at an annual rent
to be fixed by the city council; and
also authorising the city to condemn to
the public use any and all lines of poles
now existing in said city, and to that
end authorizing the city council to pass
suitable ordinances of condemnation.
22. Amendment limiting the right of
appeal, etc., from the Recorder’s Court.
23. Amendment to provide for taking
the enumeration of the inhabitants of
the city.
24. Amendment to inspect the con-
struction of all buildings in the city.
25. Amendment to have the city bonds
registered by the comptroller of the
state.
26. Amendment declaring that no
property of any kind, church, school,
public or otherwise, shall be exempt
from any of the special taxes and assess-
ments authorized by this charter for lo-
cal improvements.
27. Amendment declaring that the
provisions of this act, in so far as they
may conflict with, any state law, shall be
held to supersede the State law to that
extent, and shall not be held invalid on
account of any Sjuch conflict.
28. Amendment declaring that the city
council may by ordinance provide for
fining aidermen for absence from meet-
ings, and declaring their seats vacated
for absence from three consecutive meet-
ings, except in sicknes or without being
duly excused by a majority of the board J
I certify the foregoing amendments
were approved and adopted by the City
Council at its meeting held on Friday,
January 9th, 1891.
DAN’L J. BUCKLEY,
City Clerk.
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
To Amend the Charter of tha City of Gal-
veston.
To All Whom it May Concern: Notice
is hereby given that application will be
made by the committee appointed for that
purpose by the honorable City Council
of the City of Galveston to Amend the
Charter of said City of Galveston as fol-
lows :
Amendment creating a Board of Com-
missioners of Public Works and defining
its powers and duties.
I certify that the foregoing amendment
was approved and adopted by the City
Council at its meeting held on Ivlonday,
January 19, 1891.
Dan’l J. Buckley,
City Clerk.
Galveston, January 12, 1891.—Notice
is hereby given that application will be
made to the Twenty-second Legislature
of the State of Texas, to so amend the
Charter of the City of Galveston, as to
regulate, control or prohibit the location,
construction, maintaining, using and
operating any or all railroads now or that
may hereafter be constructed or operated
upon any of the streets of the City of
Galveston; to define the duties and liabili-
ties of the Railroad Companies using any
of the streets o said City, and to provide
remedies for enforcing the same. Also
to fix the rate of fare to be charged by
Street Railroad Companies and to regu-
late or prohibit the use of street car tickets.
H. M. Trueheart,
- J. D. Skinner,
J. P. Alvey.
The Texas Labor Conference No. 1
hereby gives notice that it will apply to
the Twenty-second legislature for amend-
ments to the Charter of the City of Gal-
veston to the effect—
l*it—That in all contracts for public
u, works or improvements bids for such
bridge, crossing or sidewalk, unless at contracts shall be upon a basis of not less
least ten days before the injury notice in Mhnn $2 per day for labor;
writing shall have been given to the j 2d—Changing the time of municipal
To All Wliotn It May Concern:
Notice is hereby given that application
will be made by committee, appointed
for that purpose by the honorable City
Council of the city of Galveston, to
amend, revise, alter, change and re-enact
the charter of said city of Galveston in
the following particulars, that is to say:
1. Amendment creating the office of
Recorder, with a salary not exceeding
$1800 per annum.
2. Amendment authorizing the City;
Council to fill and grade, or fill, grade ,
and pave, any
at the cost of the owners of the prop-
erty abutting on the alleys so improved,
the same to be a charge and lien upon
the abutting property until paid.
3. Amendment fixing the maximum
rate of taxation by said city for general
purposes, not including school purposes,
at 1 80-100 per cent, on assessed value of
.property liable to taxation.
4. Amendment authorizing the issu-
ance, by the City Council, of $1,240,000
of 5 per cent, forty year bonds, to be
sold, for cash, at not less than par, the
proceeds of which shall be used and dis-
posed of as follows, to wit. : $200,000
for defraying the city’s portion of the
cost of filling, grading and paving of
streets, provided, that not more than
$100,000 shall be expended on such work
by the city in any one year from this
fund, or from the proceeds of the issue
of bonds authorized by this section;
$40,000 shall be expended for filling of
streets and of such property as is owned
by the city, and which the city council
may designate to be filled or raised, such'
expenditures not to exceed, out of this
fund, the sum of $20,000 in any one
year; $50,000 for the erection of public
school houses, under the direction and
on the requisition of the Board of School
Trustees, provided, however, that the
interest and sinking fund required to
provide for and meet $50,000 of said
bonds shall be annually reserved out of
the school taxes for that purpose, until
the sinking fund thus reserved shall be
sufficient to pay $50,000 of said bonds;
$50,000 to constitute a special fund to be
used by the Council in abating nuisances
on private property, and for filling, grad-
ing and paving, or for otherwise irn
proving alleys and sidewalks, in the cases
where the parties chargeable with the i
abatement of such nuisances or with such '
filling, grading, paving or improvement j
of alleys or sidewalks shall fail or refuse j
to do so; any expenditures from this
fund shall be recoverable by assessment i
on the property in respect of, and con- :
cerning which, they shall be made, and
when so recovered shall remain a portion
of said special fund; the sum of $900,000
shall be employed and expended by the
Council for the procurement of an ade-
quate supply of fresh water for said city
•and for the erection of an efficient system
of sewerage and drainage, including
crematories for garbage, if found de-
sirable, and for the city’s share
of the cost of tilling, grading and pav-
ing of streets, under the following pro-
visions, to wit. : That the Council shall
apportion said $900,000 on or before Jan-
uary 1st, 1892, by setting aside, first, so
much of said sum as to it may appear
necessary for the procurement of said
water supply, second, so much of the
remainder, if any, as to it may appear
necessary for sewerage purposes as afore-
said, and third, the remainder, if any,
shall be set aside to defray the city’s
share of the cost of filling, grading and
paving of the streets when the special
fund of $200,000 aforesaid has been ex-
pended :
5. Amendment authorizing city coun-
cil to require all railway companies oc-
cupying any portion of any of the streets
of said city with their tracks to fill,
grade and pave all that portion of said
streets occupied by said tracks, includ-
ing full length of ties, and when once so
improved to maintain such improvement.
6. Amendment authorizing city coun-
cil to require all railway companies, up-
on due notice, to remove all tracks with-
in the city limits abandoned by them by
non-user, and to restore at their own ex-
pense the street or way to proper grade.
7. Amendment establishing the grade
of the city on Broadway, or avenue J,
at eight (8) feet above mean low tide,
except where the ground is naturally
higher, at which points the natural
grade shall be observed, and also author-
izing the city council to establish the
grade on all other streets, alleys and
sidewalks.
8. Amendment adopting for all mu-
nicipal elections held within the city the
system of voting known as the “Austra-
lian system.”
9. Amendment requiring the appor-
tionment of the estimated revenues of
the city to the several departments of the
city government for its general expenses;
for setting apart funds to payment of
interest on outstanding bonds; for set-
ting aside funds as sinking funds for
such bonds, and for fixing salaries of
•officials, to be made in the month of
February in each year.
10. Amendment providing for and
creating a board of managers for the
hospital in said city, known as the
“John Sealy Hospital,” and defining its
powers and duties.
11. Amendment authorizing the city
council to require all property owners
whose property may be located upon any
street or alley along which the pipes of
any sewer or system of sewerage that may
be constructed by the city may be ex-
tended to connect with such sewer or
system of sewerage, all water-closets,
sinks and drains located upon their re-
spective premises or properties, so as to
empty into such sewer or system of
sewerage.
12. Amendment authorizing the col-
lection by suit of all taxes, including
taxes for school purposes, and all assess-
ments for improvements of streets, al-
leys or sidewalks, and for abatement
of nuisances, after maturity, and im-
posing a penalty of 10 per cent on the
amount ot principal and interest unpaid
•at time of institution of such suit.
13. Amendment declaring that taxes
for school purposes shall bear interest at
the rate of 8 per cent per annum from
maturity.
14. Amendment providing that the
city of Galveston shall not be liable in
damages at the suit of any person for
injuries either to person or property
arising from the unsafe condition or
want of repair of any alley, street, way,
“As we journey through life.
Let us live by the way.”
• UHRIG’S^ CAVE, •
Corner Center & Market.
JAS. PRENDERGAST?
PROPRIETOR.
FINEST BEER IN INE CITY.
Wines, Liquors and Cigars of the very
best quality.
THE PUBLIC CORDIALLY INVITED.
HOT LUNCH FROM 10 TO 1 P. M.
Brush Electric Light Company,
Arc Lights of Standard Candle Power.
INCANDESCENT
LIGHTS
From 10 to 300 Candle Power.
Estimates for Wiring Public and Private Build-
ings Given ou Application.
Offlcfii Uli Market, Between 21th and 25th Streets,
C. VANSICKLE.
REAL ESTATE AGENTS,
Galveston National Bank Building, ). /-•as we'O'ttmkt tfvac
Comer Strand and Tremont Streets, j Lx/AL.Vea3 1 Uis, ! E9A.AO.
TELEPHONE No. 319.
H. W. BLAGGE. F. O. BERTRAND. D. R. BEATTY.
BLAGGe. BSRTRAND & CO.
I^eal Estate /liepts,
2212 Mechanic, het, 22d and 23rd. GALVESTON, TEXAS.
JOHN A. CAPLEN,
The Real Estate Agent,
OFFERS YOU THIS WEEK
Ten Choice Lots in Caplen’s First Ad-
dition to Galveston at $100 and $150
per Lot.
A Good Bargain in a House and One
Lot in the Eastern part of the city.
Several Large Tracts of Land fronting
on the Bay.
Several Choice 10 and 20-Acre Tracts
at Gardentown.
Refreshments of All Kinds on the
Grounds.
DAILY AND ON SUNDAY.
Take Woollam’s Lake Street Cars.
election from June to March, and each
ward electing its Alder men;
3d—Also that the following officers
should be elected by the vote of the peo-
ple of Galveston, viz: City Assessor,
City Tax Collector, City Attorney, City
Engineer, City Recorder, City Treasurer,
City Health Physician, City Harbor Mas-
ter, City Chief of Police, City Chief of
Fire Department, City Sexton.
Louis Cabolini, Secretary,
Wm. Ludgate, T. L. C. No. 1.
J. H. Parker,
Lawrence Senne,
Committee.
THE MAIL EDITION.
Many readers of Evening Tribune are
under the impression that it is debarred
from the mails because it contains lot-
) tery advertisements, and that, conse-
; quently, its circulation is confined to the
island. Such is not the fact, however.
I After the supply for the city is worked
| off, the press is stopped, the objection-
able advertisements taken from the forms
and replaced with an advertisement of
the city of Galveston. This “mail” edi-
tion can be mailed anywhere and any
quantity of them, open or nicely wrapped
for mailing, can be procured at Evening
Tribune’s counting room.
The New Discovery.
You have heard your friends and neigh-
bors talk about it. You may yourself be
one of the many who know from personal
experience just how good a thing it is.
If you have ever tried it, you are one of
its staunch friends, because the wonder-
ful thing about it is, that when once given
a trial, Dr. King’s New Discovery ever
after holds a place in the house. If you
have never used it and should be afflicted
with a cough, cold or any throat, lung or
chest trouble, secure a bottle at once and
give it a fair trial. It is guaranteed every
time, or money refunded. Trial hotties
free at J. J. Schott’s drug store. 6
Good Advice.
WOOLLAM’S LAKE,
THE POPULAR PLEASURE RESORT
AND PICNIC GROUNDS.
DANCING PAVILION AND MUSIC.
The Famous Place for
A.. trjLAKJB,
Real Estate,
Specialty Made of Hitchcock Property*
HOPPE’S CORNER.
THE
POPULAR RESORT OF GALVESTON.
Highest Grade
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
Imported and Domestic.
FRESH AND COOL BEER.
Pleasant Lunch Room.
ELEGANT HOT AND COLD LUNCH.
Everything r'iTst class.
A. HOPPE, PROPRIETOR.
Northeast Corner 1’ostolfice and Center.
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 83, Ed. 1 Friday, February 6, 1891, newspaper, February 6, 1891; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1246929/m1/3/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.