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Box 8

 Container

Contains 10 Results:

L. & H. Huning Accounts Receivable Ledger, 1874-1875

 File — Box: 8, item: 6
Scope and Contents Entries legible but diminutive. A March 3, 1875 entry notes that Juan Padilla purchased tacks @ $.35 and meat at $.48 adding a total of $.73 to his account receivable. Among all the Spanish surnames, one curious account is simply designated "Daisy." Daisy's November and December 1874 expenditures with the Hunings totaled $16.12½, how the half cent balance may have been paid remains open to conjecture. Throughout the Huning Journals and Ledgers, pages at the rear were often used to note...
Dates: 1874-1875

Expense book, 1882

 File — Box: 8, item: 10

Accounts Receivable Journal, 1884-1885

 File — Box: 8, item: 3
Scope and Contents Placeholder p text
Dates: 1884-1885

L.& H. Huning Cash Book, 1886-1887

 File — Box: 8, item: 9
Scope and Contents Expenses and sales of lumber and store merchandise as well as labor and other mill expenses. Not all entries relate directly to mill operations, an entry for Dec. 24, 1886 records payment of $1.50 for "Finding Steer." The short span of the recorded accounts seems to indicate that the lumber mill project was either completed or abandoned.
Dates: 1886-1887

Louis Huning Day Book, 1888

 File — Box: 8, item: 7
Scope and Contents Individual purchase descriptions display typical comprehensive detail as a Oct. 9, 1888 list of Escolastico Vigil purchasing linen, white lace, 1 wreath, 2 yds. veiling, ribbon, white braid, candles and nails, all of which appears to be preparation for a wedding
Dates: 1888

Accounts Receivable Journal, 1891-1892

 File — Box: 8, item: 2
Scope and Contents This was a period of prosperity preceding the approaching financial downturn
Dates: 1891-1892

Cash Book, 1906

 File — Box: 8, item: 5

Huning-Connell Mercantile Correspondence File, 1906-1907

 File — Box: 8, item: 1
Scope and Contents Most of the letters are above the signature block of Fred D. Huning and relate to real estate owned, leased or optioned. The tenor of the letters indicates that Fred and his mother Henrika were heavily involved in real estate investments and options.
Dates: 1906-1907