From time to time the Court established a scale of prices for ordinaries:—
At a meeting of the magistrates and committee to take the Treasurer's account, Dec. 30, 1679; For the regulating of expenses at the County Courts, it is ordered that henceforth, for the juries, there shall be allowed in money,
For their breakfast, one man, £ 0. 0. 4. For their dinner, one man 0. 1. 3. For their supper, one man 0. 1. 0. for the magistrates, For dinner, one man 0. 2. 0. For supper, one man 0. 1. 6. for the marshall and constables, one meal, 0. 1. 0.
And wine and beer, &c., to be included in the abovesaid sums; and if any ordinary shall exceed the abovesaid order, it shall be at their own peril.
In the Proprietors' Records, 1635, it is stated that a large lot, originally designed for Richard Saltonstall, “is now to be entered the Market Place.” It was bounded northerly on Mount Auburn Street, easterly on Brighton Street, and southerly on Winthrop Street. This lot retained the name of Market Place more than two hundred years; but there is no evidence that any 1