Springfield city directory and business advertiser 1874-1875, Part 9

Author: Springfield (Mass.)
Publication date: 1874
Publisher: Clark W. Bryan & Co.
Number of Pages: 468


USA > Massachusetts > Hampden County > Springfield > Springfield city directory and business advertiser 1874-1875 > Part 9


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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Pynchon House, 243 Main street, corner Lyman street; Bemis & Wetherbee.


Revere House, 193 Main street ; Morris O'Connell.


Rockingham House, 481, 483 and 485 State street ; A. Nason.


Sanford Street House, 10 and 12 Sanford street ; B. Jobson, Jr.


Springfield House, 75 and 77 State street; August Sheppert.


Sulphur Springs House, Indian Orchard ; Charles Simonds.


Union House, 528 Main street, corner Bliss ; F. E. French.


United States Hotel, 547 Main street ; George Burbach.


Public Halls.


CITY HALL, Court street, has seats for 2,700 persons. Application for it to be made to the City Clerk.


MUSIC HALL, corner Main and Pynchon streets, will seat 1,200 persons, and is rented for lectures and first-class entertainments only. Application for it may be made to Tilly Haynes, at Haynes' Hotel, Main street.


GILMORE'S HALL, Gilmore's block, will seat 600 persons. Applications may be made to D. O. Gilmore, Gilmore's block, Main street.


INDEPENDENCE HALL, State street, nearly opposite United States Arsenal.


INSTITUTE HALL, Savings Bank block, will seat 350 persons. Applications may be made at the Springfield Institution for Sav- ings.


UNION HALL, Union House block, will seat 600 persons. Applications may be made to F. E. French, Union House, 528 Main street.


FRANKLIN HALL, 28 Pynchon street near Post Office, will seat 500 persons. Applica- tions may be made to Dr. Higgins, 489 Main street.


GUNN'S HALL, Gunn's block, corner State and Walnut streets, will seat 250 persons. Applications may be made to William Gunn & Co., 87 State street.


LINCOLN HALL, corner Mill and Walnut streets, at the Water shops, will seat 500


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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY.


persons. Applications may be made to W. H. Pinney, Lincoln Hall block.


LIBERTY HALL, Worthington street, will seat about 500 persons. Applications may be made to Harvey Lyman, 188 Worthing- ton street.


Stage Routes, Expresses, etc.


SOUTH WILBRAHAM AND EAST LONG- MEADOW-Frank Davis, proprietor. Leaves the Exchange Hotel every day (Sundays excepted) at 2 P. M.


AGAWAM, FEEDING HILLS AND WEST SUFFIELD-S. Viets, proprietor. Leaves H. W. Gilbert's Restaurant, 471 Main street, at 2 P. M., and Railroad depot, daily, at 2.15 P. M.


SPRINGFIELD, CHICOPEE AND CHICOPEE FALLS-J. E. Woods, proprietor. Leaves Whitney & Adams,' corner Main and State streets, every day (Sundays excepted) at 8 A. M. Leaves Chicopee at 9 A. M. Re- turning, leaves Chicopee Falls Post Office at 10 A. M., and Chicopee at 11 A. M. Orders may be left at Whitney & Adams,' W. P. Draper's and Gunn & Merrill's. In Chicopee at C. Allen's and H. Coggswell's.


ADAMS EXPRESS COMPANY-W. B. Dins- more, president ; E. S. Sanford, vice-presi- dent; J. M. Thompson, secretary ; Henry Sanford, general superintendent ; E. G. Wescott, superintendent New England Di- vision. Office Express block, 14 Court street. F. H. Foster, agent. Lines extend- ing south and south-west.


AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY-William C. Fargo, president; Theodore M. Pome- roy, vice-president; Alexander Holland, treasurer ; J. N. Knapp, secretary ; J. C. Fargo, general superintendent; M. B. White, assistant general superintendent Eastern Division ; H. W. Dwiglit, superin- tendent Eastern division. Office, Albany, N. Y. Springfield office, 11 Lyman street, near Main street; also a receiving office at J. T. Webber's, 507 Main street. John W. Baldwin, agent. Lines extending north, east and west.


SPRINGFIELD AND HOLYOKE EXPRESS -E. Whitney, proprietor. Leaves Spring- field, daily, at 2 P. M. Orders may be left at Homer Foot & Co's, Whitney & Adams,' Gunn & Merrill's, and E. C. Barr's restaur- ant, 384 Main street.


SPRINGFIELD, WEST SPRINGFIELD, AND MITTINEAQUE EXPRESS-L. W. Shepard, proprietor. Leaves Wm. P. Draper's drug store, corner Main and Pynchon streets, daily, at 101% A. M., and from June 1 to October 1, at 412 P. M .; after October 1, at 4 P. M. Leaves Mittineaque post-office at 8 A. M. and 1 P. M.


CITY PARCEL EXPRESS - Jonathan A. Ames, proprietor. Order slates at various places in the city, as announced in adver- tising card on page 103.


CITY PARCEL EXPRESS-J. E. Janes, pro- prietor. Order slates in various places in the city.


Telegraph Companies.


FRANKLIN-J. W. Brown, president; G. R. Williamson, treasurer ; E. D. L. Sweet, executive manager ; J. G. Smith, superin- tendent ; Mrs. L. E. Gouge, manager. Office in Townsley's block, 361 Main street.


WESTERN UNION-William Orton, presi- dent ; R. H. Rochester, secretary and treas- urer, New York; Thomas T. Eckert, gen- eral superintendent, New York. Offices, Haynes' Hotel block, 404 Main street, and corner Main and Railroad streets, under Massasoit House. W. J. Denver, manager.


Omnibus.


WATER SHOPS AND RAILROAD DEPOT LINE - J. W. Lull, proprietor. Leaves Water Shops at 6.30, 8, 9 30, and 11 A. M .; 12.30, 1.30, 2.30, 3.30, 4.30, 5.30, 6, 7, and 8.30 P. M. Returning, leaves R. R. Depot at 7, 8.30, 10, and 11.30 A. M, and 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5, 6.30, 7.30, and 9 P. M. Fare, 10 cents ; fourteen tickets for $1.


J. W. Lull has started a new line through Main, State, Maple, Union, Walnut to Wa- ter Shops. Leaves Water Shops at 9 and 10 A. M., 2, 4, and 5.30 P. M. Leaves De- pot at 9.30 and 10.30 A. M., 2.30, 4 30, and 6 P. M.


Hampden County Agricultural Society.


Incorporated 1844. President, N. T. Leonard of Westfield; one vice-president from each town in the county ; secretary, J. N. Bagg of West Springfield ; treasurer, James E. Russell of Springfield. Delegate to Board of Agriculture, Horace M. Sessions


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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY:


of South Wilbraham. Membership, aboat 1,000 ; initiation fee, $5 for gentlemen, $2.50 for ladies. Fair and cattle show at West Springfield, October 3d and 4th, 1874.


Licenses and Stamps.


Licenses of various kinds are required for certain dealers and peddlers, before they can do business. The provisions of law in the matter are somewhat numerous, and are changed from time to time by new leg- islation. Some perplexity results, and it is said that people violate thie statutes, in this matter, without knowing it, and have to suffer by forfeitures and fines. It has, tliere- fore, been desired that the essential portions of the license laws, as affecting business peo- ple, be published here for ready reference.


MANUFACTURERS OR DEALERS IN CI- GARS, TOBACCO OR LIQUORS, contribute very largely for the support of tlie govern- ment, and what is required of them by the last enactment is thus stated by the Com- missioner of Internal Revenue :


" The law of December 24, 1872, requires every person engaged in any business, avo- cation or employment which renders him liable to a special tax, to procure and place conspicuously in his establishment or place of business a stamp denoting the payment of said tax before commencing business. The taxes embraced within the provisions of the law above quoted are the following, viz : Rectifiers, $200; dealers, retail liquor, $25 ; dealers, wholesale liquor, $100; deal- ers in malt liquors, wholesale, $50 ; dealers in malt liquors, retail, $20; dealers in leaf tobacco, $25 ; retail dealers in leaf tobacco, $500; and on sales of over $1,000, fifty cents for every dollar in excess of $1,000; dealers in manufactured tobacco, $5; manufactur- ers of stills, $50; and for each still manufac- tured, $20; and for each worm manufac- tured, $20 ; manufacturers of tobacco, $10; manufacturers of cigars, $10; peddlers of tobacco, first class (more than two horses), $50; peddlers of tobacco, second class (two horses), $25; peddlers of tobacco, third class (one horse), $15 ; peddlers of tobacco, fourth class (on foot or public conveyance), $10; brewers of less than 500 barrels, $50; brewers of 500 barrels or more, $100."


PEDDLERS .- Extracts are given below from the fiftieth chapter of the Revised


Statutes of Massachusetts; but changed es- sentially, in some portions; by subsequent amendments. The emendations up to tlie present time are here presented.


No license is required for peddling some articles, as appears from the following in the chapter mentioned above : " Section thirteen -Any person may go about from town to town, or from place to place, or from dwell- ing-house to dwelling-house in the same town, exposing to sale or selling fruits and provisions, live animals, brooms, agricultu- ral implements, fuel, newspapers, books, pamplılets, agricultural products of the United States, and the products of his own labor or the labor of his family," but, " no ar- ticles of the growth or production of any foreign country " are included in this free permit. Minors may be required to pro- cure a license before they may sell articles tliat adults can sell without license, if a town or city by vote so direct.


Honorably discharged soldiers and sailors, partially disabled by wounds or sickness in tlie service of the United States, may obtain a special State license to peddle without paying anything therefor, on applying to the secretary of the commonwealth, and presenting satisfactory proofs of such ser- vice, disability and discharge, and of per- sonal identity.


Peddling is forbidden by law, in the case of certain articles, as will be seen, from sec- tion fifteen : " The sale of spirituous liquors, playing cards, indigo, and feathers, in tlie manner specified in section thirteen, is pro- hibited." Violation of the law in this and in other matters is perilous, as will be seen by section twenty-seven, farther on.


How to obtain a license for peddling, what must be paid for it, what sort of a " character" is needed, and what things may be dealt in, are set forth by the law in the chapter referred to, as amended at vari- ous times, in words following :- " Section six- teen-The secretary of the commonwealth may grant a license to go about exposing to sale and selling any goods, wares or mer- chandise, not prohibited in the preceding section, to any applicant who files in his of- fice a certificate signed by the mayor of the city, or a majority of the selectmen of a town, stating that to the best knowledge and belief of such mayor or selectmen, the applicant therein named is a citizen of the


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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY.


United States, or has declared his intention to become a citizen of the United States, and is of good repute for morals and integ- rity. The mayor or selectmen, before granting such certificate, shall require the applicant to make oath that he is the person named therein; that he is a citizen of the United States, or has declared his intention to become a citizen of the United States ; which oath shall be certified by a justice of the peace and accompany the certificate. Every license so granted shall bear date the day it is issued, and shall continue in force one year and no longer. Section seventeen- The secretary shall cause to be inserted in every license the names of such cities and towns as the applicant selects, with the sum to be paid to the respective treasurers thereof annexed, and shall receive from the applicant one dollar for each city or town so inserted. Every person so licensed may sell as aforesaid any goods, wares and mer- cliandise, not prohibited in section fifteen, in any city or town mentioned in his license, upon first paying the sum so required to the treasurer of such city or town, wlio shall certify on the face of the license the sum so received. Section eighteen-Every person li- censed under the two preceding sections shall pay to the treasurer of each city or town mentioned in his license, the sums fol- lowing : For every town containing not more than one thousand inhabitants, accor- ding to the United States census next pre- ceding the date of his license, three dollars ; for every town containing more than one thousand and not more than two thousand inhabitants, six dollars ; for every town con- taining more than two thousand and not more than three thousand inhabitants, eight dollars; for every town containing more than three thousand and not more than four thousand inhabitants, ten dollars ; for every city and town containing more than four thousand inhabitants, ten dollars, and one dollar for every one thousand inhabitants over four thousand contained therein ; but the sum so to be paid to a treasurer shall in no case exceed twenty-five dollars. Section nineteen-Any person resident, paying taxes upon his stock in trade, and qualified to vote in a city or town, may there expose to sale and sell goods, wares or merchandise, upon obtaining a license pursuant to the provisions of sections sixteen and seventeen,


and shall not be required to pay to the treasurer of such city or town any sum therefor." For a special State license, fifty dollars must be paid the secretary of the commonwealth; and for a county license, one dollar to the secretary for each county taken, and an additional sum to the treas- urer of such county, varying in amount from four dollars for the richest county, to one for the poorest county. Licenses may be transferred.


Peddlers must post and show licenses, as will be seen by the following :- " Section twenty-four-Every person licensed to ped- dle as herein before provided shall post his name, residence, and the number of his li- cense, in a conspicuous manner upon his parcels or vehicle, and when such license is demanded of him by any mayor, alderman, selectman, town or city treasurer or clerk, constable, police officer, or justice of the peace, shall fortlıwith exhibit it, and if he neglects or refuses so to do, shall be subject to the same penalty as if he had no license. So much of this chapter as relates to hawk- ers and peddlers, or a synopsis thereof, shall be printed on every license."


Forfeitures for violation of this law are from fifty to one thousand dollars. Half the money thus obtained goes to complain- ant.


PAWNBROKERS, DEALERS IN OLD JUNK, AND INTELLIGENCE OFFICES, must procure license annually from the Mayor and Al- dermen; and if they fail to do it, heavy forfeitures are incurred.


OWNERS OF DOGS must annually pay $2 to City Clerk the first of May, for license of a male, and $5 for a female. A penalty of $15 against an owner, and of $100 against an officer, for not complying with the law.


OTHER LICENSES obtained from Mayor and Aldermen, are numerous, and are re- quired for refining, storing or selling kero- sene ; for hackmen and truckmen ; for inn- keepers ; for auctioneers ; and for erection of new buildings, etc.


Hampden Park Association.


President, L. J. Powers ; secretary, H. M. Phillips; treasurer, D. J. Marsh; 20 mem- bers. Control Hampden Park under a lease, and maintain it as a place for public recrea-


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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY.


tion and active sports. Exhibition of horses here August 18, 19, 20 and 21; premiums offered, $50,000.


Springfield Water Works.


WATER COMMISSIONERS -Charles O. Chapin, president; Samuel W. Porter, sec- retary ; Daniel L. Harris, A. D. Briggs, George C. Fisk. Book-keeper and collec- tor, George F. Farmer; engineer, Phineas Ball. Office, 18 Barnes' Block. The Board were elected in 1872, and under authority of the Legislature have purchased for the city the property of the Springfield Aque- duct Company, and considerably increased the supply of water by pumping into the aqueduct reservoirs from Garden Brook.


A steam pump will also be in operation at Brightwood, which will bring into tlie reservoir a million gallons of water daily from the Connecticut River alone. As the daily consumption is only one and a quar- ter millions a day, it will be seen that the city is well provided for. The two reser- voirs in use are east of Armory street ; one is near it, north of Morgan road, and holds forty million gallons; the other is more distant from the street, and near the Boston and Albany Railroad, and holds fifteen million gallons.


There is also a storage reservoir north of Morgan road, whose capacity is more than double both the others combined.


A reservoir has been commenced in Cherry Valley, in the town of Ludlow, four and one-half miles from Jenksville, which it is calculated will furnish this city with ten million gallons daily. It is to cover a terri- tory of 445 acres, and will hold about twelve hundred million gallons of water. The work was begun May 5, 1873, and it is now expected to have the reservoir finished and the mains laid to the city during the present year.


Annual rates for water-dwelling-house, for one family, $8; two families, $12; $4 additional for bathing tub. Store or office, $4; hotel, $50 to $250; manufacturing es- tablishments, 75 cents for each employe. Stationary steam engine, working not over ten hours per day to twenty horse power, $5; over twenty horse power, special rates. Pri- vate stable for one horse, $4; each addi- tional horse, $2. Livery stable, for each horse, $2; building purposes, $10 for each


hundred thousand brick used. Rents due on the first of April and October and pay- able at the office.


United States Armory.


Commanding officer-James G. Benton, Brevet Colonel Ordnance Corps; Assist- ants to Commanding Officer, Captain J. P. Farley, Brevet Major G. W. McKee, Brevet Captain G. D. Ramsay, and Second Lieu- tenant Henry Metcalf, of the Ordnance Corps ; Ordnance Storekeeper and Paymas- ter, Major Edward Ingersoll.


The arsenal, offices, store-houses and principal shops are on nearly the highest ground in Springfield, on State street, and command a fine view of the Connecticut River and the surrounding country. The heavier operations required are carried on at the Water Shops on Mill River. Prob- ably in no other part of the world has the manufacture of muskets been carried to such perfection. The breech-loader, model of 1868 and of 1870, which has been made here, was the combined result of the inven- tions and improvements applied by the gov- ernment and the highest skill displayed by private enterprise, and it is probably tlie best breech-loading arm in the world.


The principal work done at the Armory, the past year, has been the manufacturing of rifles and carbines-18,000 of the former and 10,000 of the latter having been made. To results thus obtained by the government, private manufacturers are largely indebted, and would not themselves, in many cases, undertake the processes by which important facts have been demonstrated that materi- ally benefit them. Making a liberal allow- ance for all items of expenditure, labor, superintendence, depreciation, condemned work, interest, etc., guns were manufac- tured here through the war at a cost of only $11.70 each, while similar arms from con- tractors cost $20 each, besides charges for proving and inspection.


The chief arsenal of the government for small arms is here, and there are now stored in it about 275,000 fire-arms of various kinds for the military service.


Most of the men work by the piece. The eight-hour law prevails, the working hours being from 7 A. M. to 4 P. M. in Summer, and 712 A. M. to 412 P. M. in Winter. During the war about 3,000 men were em-


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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY.


ployed liere, turning out about 1,000 mus- kets daily, but requiring some portion of the works to be run nights.


The machinery for the manufacture of the enormous Hitchcock gun is nearly com- pleted. More than $50,000 has been ex- pended in getting ready to make the gun, and operations will begin as soon as the material for construction is decided upon.


The Alms-House and the Poor.


The Alms-house and City Farm are on Boston road, two miles from City Hall, and are under the care of Mr. A. S. Pease. From 41 to 51 poor people have been sup- ported here the past year. Temporary out- door relief, in food, fuel, etc., was given to about 700 or 800 persons, by the Overseers of the Poor. The Truant School is also at the Alms-house, with Miss L. A. Bascom as teacher.


The city's hospitality has been dispensed to 1,141 persons, at the City Hall, during the year ending June, 8th 1874.


Jail and House of Correction.


Located on State street, opposite St. Michael's churchı. Jailor, A. M. Bradley, salary, $1,000; assistant jailor, F. A. Nor- way, salary, $900 ; chaplain, Rev. William Rice, salary, $300. There are, on an aver- age, about 112 prisoners here, a few of whom are females. Of 800 committed to the house of correction last year, 650 were for drunkenness. Those under sentence make slippers, turning out about 1,200 pairs daily. Their labor is contracted for by L. C. Smith, at $48 per year for each person in house of correction. The order and neat- ness which prevail are heartily commended by the legislative committee, as also are the humane and intelligent management. Meeting on the Sabbath with preaching at 9 A. M. Sunday-school, conducted by the chaplain, at 4 P. M., to which visitors are not admitted, unless they aid in this service. A library has been added the past year, by the generosity of our citizens, and consists now of about 500 volumes. A yard is to be made west of the jail this Summer, to fur- nish opportunity for exercise to the prison- oners. It will be 108x32 feet in size.


City Hospital.


Located on Boston road, east of the Ar- mory. Superintendent and matron, Mr. and Mrs. Jonah Stiles. Patients pay $5 per week, and have excellent care and good quarters ; if so sick as to need extra nurses, an additional charge is made for these, and also for medical attendance.


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Grand Army of the Republic.


E. K. WILCOX ENCAMPMENT, POST 16, DEPARTMENT OF MASSACHUSETTS-Head- quarters, Mass. Mutual Life Insurance block, 413 Main street. Officers-E. A. Newell, P. C .; V. Murdock, S. V. C .; T. A. Ryan, J. V. C .; C. H. Rust, Adjutant ; C. C. Burdett, surgeon ; E. D. Capron, Q. M .; R. R. McGregor, chaplain; J. I. Rol- lins, O. D .; W. H. Harper, O. G .; A. B. Wood, S. M .; L. E. Howard, Q. M. S.


Military Companies Located in the City of Springfield.


COMPANY B, 2D REGIMENT M. V. M., " CITY GUARD "-Captain, R. J. Hamilton ; 1st Lieutenant, N. E. Kellogg ; 2d Lieuten- ant, W. W. Sawyer. Armory, corner State and Market streets. Chartered June 15, 1866. Meet first and third Wednesday evenings in the month, at 712 P. M.


COMPANY G, 2D REGIMENT M. V. M., "PEABODY GUARD"-Captain, F. Edward Gray ; 1st Lieutenant, Dr. J. N. Dodge; 2d Lieutenant, A. H. G. Lewis. Meetings first and third Wednesday evenings of every month ; annual meeting at the first regular meeting in October, at their armory, Nortlı Church Block, 32212 Main street.


Springfield Cemetery Associa- tion.


Organized in 1841. President, A. D. Briggs ; clerk and treasurer, F. H. Harris ; auditor, W. L. Wilcox; superintendent, J. C. Shamp; trustees, Henry Fuller, A. D. Briggs, Horace Smith, James Abbe, George Dwight, William H. Smith, J. M. Cooley, Charles O. Chapin, D. H. Brigham. The Cemetery grounds cover an extent of about 40 acres. There were 292 interments in 1873.


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SPRINGFIELD CITY DIRECTORY.


Public Conveyances.


AGAWAM FERRY-Pier, South Main St. Hours, from 512 A. M. till 812 P. M. Fares, for foot passenger, 3 cents ; one-horse team, 10 cents ; two-horse team, 15 cents.


SPRINGFIELD BRIDGE-Entrance from Bridge street, connecting the city with West Springfield. Open day and night, and free.


Springfield Post Office.


Located in Haynes' Hotel block, corner Main and Pynchon streets. Open in Sum- mer from 7 A. M. to 8 P. M .; and in Win- ter, from 712 A. M. to 8 P. M .; open on Sunday from 9 to 10 A. M. Postmaster, H. C. Lee ; chief money order clerk, George E. Spaulding ; chief clerk, John H. St. Clair ; assistant money order clerk and stamp clerk, C. V. Treadwell; mailing clerk, E. K. Dewey ; assistant mailing clerks, Robert A. Mills and F. W. Adams ; general delivery clerk, Dexter J. Folsom ; newspaper depart- ment, William D. Fuller ; box delivery clerk, Henry R. Coates; night clerk, William Cleeland.


CARRIERS AND DISTRICTS-W. L. Hart, first district, extending from Pynchon to Hooker streets, on the west side of Main street ; J. Monroe Gibbons, second district, comprising all the section east of Main street and north of the railroad; George S. Tiffany, third district, running on the east side of Main street between State street and the depot and eastward as far as Byers street ; William E. Fisher, fourth district, extending from Pynchon to South street, west of Main; L. J. Fisher, fifth district, on the east side of Main street, between State street and Mill river, and bounded also by Myrtle street, Ingraham avenue, the ceme- tery, and a portion of Pine and George streets; Julius D. Allen, sixth district, from Byers and Myrtle to Oak, running out to Quincy street, and on the other side of State street, bounded by Worthington and Sher- man streets; and Edward A. Bullens, sev- enth district, covering all the territory south of Quincy street and east of Pine street. All these will make deliveries twice a day, while the eighth carrier, Charles K. Lewis, looks after the carriers' accounts and reports in the office, and makes a third delivery on the business section of Main street.


Boxes for deposit of letters are attached to lamp-posts, located as follows :


Main street, near street railway office, corner of Main and Sargeant; corner of Main and Congress ; Main street, near Bos- ton and Albany railroad office; corner of Main and Hampden; Main street, above Bridge ; corner of Main and Pynchon; cor- ner of Main and State; corner of Main and Park ; corner of Main and Central ; corner of Main and Gardner; corner of Main and Mill ; corner of Water and Margaret; cor- ner of Water and Bliss; corner of Water and Bridge ; corner of Chestnut and Carew ; corner of North and Grovener; corner of Chestnut and Franklin ; corner of Chestnut and Bridge ; corner of Spring and Worth- ington ; corner of Mattoon and Salem ; State opposite Elliott; corner of Union and School; corner of Union and Maple; cor- ner of Central and Maple; corner of Cen- tral and Pine; corner of Walnut and Ash- ley ; corner of Walnut and Mill; corner of Walnut and Pine; corner of State and Steb- bins; corner of State and Oak; corner of State and Walnut; corner of Bay and Flor- ida.




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