The Providence almanac and business directory 1880, Part 3

Author:
Publication date: 1880
Publisher: Providence, R.I. Sampson, Davenport, & Co
Number of Pages: 630


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8. Six hundred persons dying daily of small pox at Portaleza, Northern Brazil.


jo. Wade Hampton elected U. S. Senator from South Carolina.


10. The late Joseph B. Eaton left sso,v o to the Boston Y. M. C. I'nion, provided the remainder of the debt of that association shall be pa'd within six months.


10. Hon. Frederick O. Prince (dem.) elected mayor of Boston. The total vote stands - Prince, 19,589; Codman, 18,010; King, 452; scattering, 16; total vote, 58,/67. Prince's plurality, 1,570.


10. The rain storm to-day did serions damage in many parts of New England, ruilroads and high- ways were washed out, bridges und houses destroyed, and much dam- age done hy the wind. An under- inined culvert on the Central Ver- mont Railroad wrecked a train near Bartonsville, Vt., and two men were killed. At Westfield, Mass., mills and other buildings were demolished.


12. The fair in aid of the N. E. Hospital for women and children, at Horticultural Hall, in Boston, which closed to-day, netted $13,- 000.


12. Dr. S. Augustus Arnold, of Providence, died, aged 81 years.


13. Mr. Edmunds's electoral bill passed the U. S. Senate, by a vote of 35 to 26.


13. Mrs. Elizabeth Child, one of the oldest residents of Boston, died. aged 97 years.


14. Grand Duchess of Hesse- Darmstadt ( Princess Alice of Eng- land) died of diptheria, at Darm- stadt.


15. Charles Callahan shot his brother-in-law, Patrick Cain. se- riously wounding him, and then killed himself. Both parties lived at 99 Poplar street, Boston.


17. Gold declines to par for the first time since October, 1861. On July 11, 1864, the premium rose to 82.85, the highest recorded sales during these seventeen years.


17. Mr. Blaine's resolution. call- ing for an investigation of alleged election frauds and outrages, with the Senate amendments, adopted in the Senate.


17. The Hebrew Fair formally opened in the Mechanics' building, in Boston, this evening.


18. The appointment of Judge John Lowell, of Massachusetts, as U. S. Circuit Judge of the First Judical Circuit, confirmed by the Senate.


19. The resignation of the Rev. Dr. J. H. Means, as pastor of the Second Church in Dorchester, ac- cepted by the Ecclesiastical Coun- cil, to whom it had been referred.


19. Bayard Tavlor, minister to Germany, died suddenly at Berlin, in his fifty-fourth year.


21. The Duke of Cumberland married the Princess Thyra of Denmark, at Copenhagen.


CHRONICLE OF EVENTS.


23. The statue of Charles Sum- ner, standing in the Boston Public Garden, unveiled to-day.


23. Forefathers' Day observed by the N. E. Society, at Fifth Ave- nue Hotel, New York. Secretaries Evarts and Sherman, Sen. Blaine, Gen. Sherman, Gov. Van Zandt, and others made speeches.


24. Ezra Wilson, a confectioner, at $5 Sudbury street, Boston, killed his wife and himself in his store, on the night of this date.


25. Unprecedented snow storm in Western New York, hlockading railroad lines, etc.


Ex-Gov. Onslow Stearns died this evening at Concord, N. H., in his sixty-eighth year.


20. The Pentecost-Stebbins evan- gelistic work commenced in Provi- louce, at the Union Congregational Church.


29. Fire destroyed the factory of the W. P. Emerson Piano Co., in Boston ; loss estimated $5,000.


80. The Bryant commemoration was held in the Academy of Music, New York, this evening. George William Curtis delivered an ora- tion on the life, character. and writings of Win. Cullen Bryant. President Hayes, Secretary Evarts, and many other prominent men were on the platformn.


1979. January.


1. The one hundredth session of the General Court of Massachusetts organized to-day. President Cogs- well was re-elected in the Senate. and Levi C. Wade chosen Speaker in the House.


2. Ilon. Caleb Cushing died at Newburyport, in his seventy-ninth year.


2. Boston experienced a very severe snow storm, followed by an exceedingly cold wave.


2. Gov. Talbot was inaugurated to-day, and delivered a message to the Legislature, urging retrench- ment and reform in the manage- ment of Mass, state affairs.


3. The Public Library, at Iling- ham, destroyed by fire.


3. Williain Whitaker, of Provi- lence, died suddenly, aged 63 yrs. & Gen. Grant receives a hearty welcome at Dublin, Ireland.


3. The Legislature of Maine choose Alonzo Gareelon (den.) Governor of the State.


4. Moncasi, the would-be assas- sin of King Alphonse of Spain, executed at Madrid to-dav.


4. The trial of James B. Erskine and Charles W. Lynch, for uttering i at Providence.


a forged deal of real estate. con- cluded to-day, the jury returning a ventiet of guilty against both defendants.


6. The new city government of Providence organiza, and Mayor Dove delivered an idungreal ul- cire's ..


9. At a trial af skill with the rifle in New York, Capt. Bogardus broke 5.550 balls withont missing one, and 6,000 ont of 6,015 ;.


10. Lieat .- Colonel A. Hun Berry, of Lynn, appointed Adjt .- General of Massachusetts.


10. The U. S. Senate confirnied the nomination of Thomas 1 .. Nel- son, as U. S. Judge for the District of Massachusetts.


10. The Bayard Taylor memorial meeting was held this evening at Tremont Temple, Boston. A poem by Longfellow was read, and O. W. Holmes. A. B. Alcott, and others made addresses.


10. Jacob Bigelow, M.D., dird at his residence in Boston, aged 91 years.


11. Kimball & Colwell's pork- packing establishment, at Provi- denee, partially destroyed by fire ; loss 81.500.


12. Commodore John Guest. I. S. N., died at Portsmouth Navy Yard, aged 58 years.


14. The January session of the Rhode Island general assembly opened in Providence.


14. A 82,000,000 fire occurred on Crosby street, New York ; one fire- man was killed and many injured.


14. MeDonnell and Sharpe, Molly Maguires, were hung at Mauch Chunk, l'a., the reprieve from Gov. Hartranft being received by the sheriff thirty seconds after the drop fel !.


14. The British troops advance into the territory of Cety wayo, the Zula king.


16. The Rhode Island Institute of Instruction commenced its 34th ammal session in Providence. Miss selma Borg, of Finland, spoke upon the subject of history.


16. Mrs. Kate Cobb convicted of murder in the second degree, at Norwich, Conn.


16. Heaviest snow storm of the season in Boston.


16. William Burbank, sentenced to State Prison thirteen months ago for attempting to poison a family in Pawtucket, R. I., and who is now siek beyond recovery, is par- doped by Gov. Van Zandt.


20. . Cyrus Harris confirmed by U. S. Senate collector of customs


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CHRONICLE OF EVENTS.


21. The following U. S. Senators were elected to-day : Orville II. Platt (rep.), Conncetient ; Wilkin- son Call (dem.), Florida ; John A. Logan (rep. ), Illinois ; D. W. Voor- he's (demi.), Indiana ; Gen. James Shields (democrat, short term) and George G. Vest (dom., long term), Missouri ; Zebulon B. Vance ( dem), North Carolina; Roscoe Conkling (rep.), New York ; J. Donald Cam- erou (rep.), Pennsylvania.


21. Hon. George S. Hilliard died at Longwood, aged 70 years.


22. The grandson and last de- seendant of Daniel Webster, Ash- burton Webster, died in New York, aged 30 years.


22. The twenty-first anniversary of the Brownson Lyceum, Provi- dence, was celebrated this evening. Governor Van Zandt, Bishop Hen- dricken, and others made speeches.


22. The " Carnival of Authors," for the benefit of the Old South Fund, opened at Music Hall, Bos- ton, this evening, with great bril- liancy and novelty.


23. The steamer Homer, which left Bostou on the sixteenth ult. for Liverpool, has not been heard from.


was dedicated to this purpose to- day.


24. The one hundred and twen- tieth anniversary of the birth of Robert Burns was celebrated at Paine Memorial Hall. Boston.


24. In a suit against the New York Times for alleged libel, Mr. E. S. Keitt, of South Carolina, re- covers six cents damages. The ad damnum was placed at $50,000.


:5. The bill passed by Congress, providing for the payment of ar- rears of pensions, was signed by the President.


27. Dr. Henry R. Linderman, many years director of the Phila- delphia mint, died, aged 53 years.


28. A bill to pay Warren Mitchell $128,000 for cotton seized at Savan- nah, Ga., during the war, was de- frated in the Senate, by a vote of 30 to 17.


28. The Legislature of Massa- chusetts has voted the annual pay- ment of its members to be five hundred dollars eacht.


20. Senator Christiancy nomi- nated and confirmed minister to l'eru.


29. Annual convention of the Massachusetts department G. A. R. opened in Boston this evening.


23. The second trial of John B. Calder, late cashier ot the Grocers and Producers Bank, Providence, cuded, as did the first, with a disa- greement of the jury.


29. The woolen mill in Granite- ville, Burrillville, R. I, destroyed by fire ; loss $ 100,000.


:0. Marshal MacMahon resigns the Presidency of the French Ke- public, and M. Grevy is elveted his successor.


31. The detectives' theory of the Dexter mystery is published to- day. The public are assured that there was no murder; that Cashier Barron Imnd-cuffed and gagged himself, crawled into the vault, locked himself in behind the double doors, and became a sni- cide. Of couse there must be a motive shown to complete this elaborate and unique design, so ingeniously wrought by wise and careful men.


31. The Ebenezer Smith will case ended betore Judge MeKim, who dismissed the petition. The case is to be taken up to the Supreme Court.


Sl. The lease of the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg, and New Bed- ford Railroad to the Ohl Colony Railroad for nine hundred and


23. The old high school building on Benefit street, Providence, which has been remodelled and refur- | ninety-nine years was signed to- nished for the State Normal School, | day.


31. M. Gambetta elected Presi- dent of the Chamber of Deputies, at Versailles.


February.


2. Richard Henry Dana, senior. author and poet, died in Boston, aged 91 years.


.3. Mr. Wiggin, the first detective employed in the Dexter Bank rob- bery case, makes a statement that Barron was murdered, and died a hero.


3. The Providence Library has been open one year to-day, during which time 90,678 books have been issued.


3. Ten stores, a printing office, and the Episcopal Church in Lce. Mass., destroyed by fire; loss $150,000.


5. Solomon HI. Howe, of Bolton, Mass , President of the New Bed- ford and Taunton Railroad, died at Young's Hotel, Boston, aged Si years.


5. The Warwick (R. I.) Railroad was sold at nnetion to-dny, Mr. A. J. Dull, of New Jersey, being the purchaser nt :31,000.


6. Colonel P'elton was before the Cipher Investigating Commitice. | and testified regarding negotiations


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CHRONICLE OF EVENTS.


for the purchase of the South Car- olina returning board. Heclaimed for his uncle, Samuel J. Tilden, complete ignorance of what was being done in this matter.


7. Gen. N. P. Banks nominated by the President to be U. S. Mar- shal of Massachusetts.


7. Manton Marble, ex-editor of the New York World, testifies be- fore the Fotter sub-committee, in reference to cipher telegrams.


7. The bill to allow lady lawyers to practice in the United States Courts, passed the Senate to-day.


8. Mr. Samuel J. Tilden testified before the Potter sub-committee in New York, and disclaimed all knowledge of the cipher despatches


9. The English Government has prohibited the landing ot live eat- de, from the United States, at its ports after the twenty-eighth inst.


11. The Boston barque Haw- thorne. Capt. Mason, was wrecked near South Shoals; two men were drowned, and the vessel and cargo øre a total loss.


13. Sixty-three horses were burned in a New York stable on the night of this date. Patterson, N. J., has a $250,000 fire, and Lon- don, Ontario, a $200,000 one.


14. Dr. Hepworth's resignation, as pastor of the Church of the Disciples, in New York, accepted ..


14. Important debate on the Chinese immigration question in the Senate. Senator Bruce (col- ored), of Mississippi, was called to the chair, and presided over the Senate during a part of the after- noon session.


15. Robert Carter, author, and at one time editor and manager of the Daily Commonwealth, the or- gan of the Free Soil party, died in Cambridge, Mass., aged (0) years.


16. The Second Baptist Church, in East Providence, dedicated to- dav.


16. Dom Pedro; of Brazil, has contributed a stone, weigning nearly eight tons, to the Wash- ington monument.


16. The birthday of Abraham Lincoln was commemorated at Union Hall, Boston, this evening. It. The definite treaty of peace with Turkey ratified by the Czar of Russia.


17. The curled-hair factory, at Hyde Park, Mass., destroyed by fire; loss $18.000.


17. The U. S. Senate confirmed the nomination of M. P. Kennard, as assistant treasurer at Boston, and ex-Gov Hartranft, as post- master of Philadelphia.


17. New Town Hall in Milton, Mass., dedicated.


19. Mr. Henry G. Gladding, of Providence, died suddenly, in the seventy-sixth year of his age.


20. Rev. Reuben Nelson, D.D., publisher and manager of the Methodist Book Concern in New York, died, nged Go yours.


20 and 21. During the terrible gales on these dates, great disasters have visited the Gloucester fisher- men, on George's Banks. Four- teen vessels have been wrecked, and one hundred and fifty-tive lives lost.


10. Very heavy snow fall, block- ing up the streets in Boston. and interfering with horse and steam cars. Storm very severe in most parts of New England.


21. The barn on the John Adams estate, at East Providence, with its contents, destroyed by fire; loss $6.000.


22. Washington's Birthday gen- erally observed throughout the country as a holiday. At New- buryport, a statue of George Wash- ington, the gift of Daniel Tenney, was formally presented to the city.


22. William Ross, a well-known citizen of Providence, died, aged 67 years.


23. Albert Theodore Emile Von Room, Prussian general and states- man, died, in his seventy-sixth year.


24. Charles Ifarris, re-elected superintendent of streets, and William Doogue, city forester, in Boston.


24. Solonion Cohen and John J. Conway. "private detectives," have been arrested for conspiracy, to wreck a train on the Boston and Providence Railroad.


24. The trial of M. Frank Paige, charged with conspiring to defraud his creditors, commenced in the Superior Court, at Boston.


25. The soft money Congress- men issue an address to the people of the United States, calling for united action, and a separation from the old parties.


26. The schooner David H. Talek wrecked off Barnegat, on the New Jersey coast, and six persons per- ished.


27. On the seventy-second anni- versary of the birth of Longfellow, the children of Cambridge pre- sented him with a beautifully carved chair, made from the wood of the old chestnut tree, celebrated in the " Village Blacksmith." Around the seat. in raised German


56


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CHRONICLE OF EVENTS.


text, are the following lines from the poem : -


And children cominghome from school Look in at the open door ;


And catch the burning sparks that fly Like chaf from a threshing four.


Jennie P. Clark, of Boston), en- closed in a trunk, was found this morning in Saugus river, heur West Lynn. An examination showed the deceased to have been the victim of malpractice, and that the face had been mutilated, with the evident design of preventing identification.


27. Mrs. Patience Albro died in Foster, R. J., aged 1u2 years.


28. The manufacturing property of the Atlantic Delaine Company, in Providence, was sold by auction to-day for $300,200. Providence parties were the purchasers. The property cost over $2,000,000.


March.


1. The majority (dem.) report of the Potter investigating committee claims to show fraud, on the part of the republicans, in the Florida and Louisiana elections, and gives a majority of votes for Tilden. The charges of intimidation, it says, are all manufactured, etc., etc.


1


2. President Hayes's veto of the auti-Chinese bill was received and read in the House, and the Execu- tive was sustained.


2. The town of Reno, in Nevada, nearly destroyed by fire, with a loss of above $1,000,000. Five persons perished.


3. The minority (rep.) report of the Potter investigating committee dissents from many of the views expressed by the majority, and the conclusions there arrived at. They claim that the investigation was neither full nor systematic, the lateness of the commencement of the inquiry precluding thorough- ness. The cipher despatches they show to be witnesses of democratic Corruption, and renew the charges of violence and intimidation, on the part of the democrats, in the Louisiana and Florida elections.


3. Senator Zach Chandler made a notable sprech in the Senate, on the amendment to exelunde Jeffer- son Davis from the benefits of the arrears of pension bills. He re- hearsed the history of Jefferson Davi, since he entered the Senate. twenty years ago, recounted his freasonable nets, und ropeded the bravado, which dared to " utter enlogue upon him, whom every


man, woman, and child in the North believes to have been a double-dyed truitor."


3. Win. Howitt, English anthor, died at Rome, in his eighty-fourth year.


4. The forty-fifth Congress ad-


27. The dead body of a young woman (afterwards identified as , journed sine die at noon to-day. President Hnyes has called au ex- tra session, convening the forty- sixth Congress, on the eightreuth instant, the reason therefor being the non-appropriation, by the forty-fifth Congress, of necessary funds for the expenses of the Gov- ernment.


4. The town treasurer of Candia, N. II., Mr. E. R. Ingalls, states that he was seized, gagged, handenfied, and bound to a ladder in his barn early this evening hy a gang of burglars, who robbed him of $70, belonging to the town.


5. Rev. O. P. Gifford installed pastor of the Warren Avenne Bap- tist Church, Boston.


5. Elihu Burritt, "the learned blacksmith," died at his home in New Britain, Conn., in his sixty- ninth year.


5. Charles P. Stickney, defaulter in Fail River, sentenced to five years in the State Prison.


6. Major-General Reno exoner- ated from charges of cowardice, in the battle of Little Big Horn, by a court of inquiry.


9. The new " Vaughan Building" in Providence, erected on the site of the old one which was destroyed in the fire of September, ISM7, is completed.


9. Rev. John Weiss died in Bos- ton, aged 60 years.


10. The twenty-fifth anniversary of the first company organized for the laying of a telegraphie cable across the Atlantic Ocean was commemorated at the hinise of Cyrus W. Field, in New York. Four of the five original projectors were there, namely, Peter Cooper, Marshall O. Roberts, Cyrus W. Field, and Moses G. Taylor.


10. On the Thames River, Eng- land, William Ross, of St. John, N. B., won the four-mile single- scull race.


12. The town of Szegedin, Hun- gary, submerged, and a large por- tion of the town destroyed. Up- wards of three thousand lives lost. and sixty thousand people made homeless. One hundred square miles, in the neighborhood of Szegedin, flooded.


18. On thetwenty- ninth of April. 1877, Judge Chishohn, his dangh- ter, Cornelia, and son, Johnny.


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CHRONICLE OF EVENTS.


were murdered by a mob in De, funds, hus been arrested. The Kalb, Miss., and to-day their bod- [ loss is known to be upwards of $60.000.


ies were laid away in one grave, at Loek Haven, I'n.


13. The marriage of the Duke of Connaught to the Princess Louise Margaret, of Prussia, solenmized at Windsor Castle.


14. Herr Andersson, the cele- brated chess player, and professor of mathematies at the University of Breslan.died, in his sixty-first year.


14. Win. IL. Devlin was hanged at East Cambridge, John Q. Pink- ham at Concord, N. H., and Henry O. Gravelin at Windsor, Vt. The latter, to the last, protested his in- nocence.


15. The six days' international walking match at Gilmore's Gar- den, New York, ended this even- ing. Rowell, the Englishman, won the Astley beit and championship of the world, scoring 500 miles. Ennis waiked 475, and Harriman 450 miies.


16. Gen. Thomas W. Sherman, U. S. A., died at Newport, R. I., aged 66 years.


16. William Greene Williams died in Providence, aged 81 years.


16. Miragoane, n town in Mayti, was destroyed by a fire on the night of this date, rendering over five thousand people homeless ; loss $1.000,000.


18. The extra session of the forty - sixth Congress met to-day. Samuel J. Randall was elected Speaker of the House. In the Senate, Vice-President Wheeler presided.


19. State-Bank Examiner Tit- comb, of Maine, makes a report of his investigation of the accounts | of the late Cashier Barron, of the Dexter Savings Bank, in which he vindicates the cashier's integrity.


19. Pineville, Mo., is neariv de- stroyed by fire ; only four buildings are left standing.


19. The President's message to the extra session of Congress, ac- companied by the trensury esti- mates, was received and read in both Senate and Ilouse.


19. The French Hoating battery Arrogante sprung a leak, und foundered off the Isles of Hyeres, ' republican majority. 3.826.


during a gale, and forty-seven men, ont of one hundred and twenty-two, were drowned.


21. This morning, 84.500 was found to be stolen from the safe in the counting-room of the Arling- ton Mill, in Lawrence.


24. The trial of T. De Witt Tal- mage, pastor of the Brooklyn Tub- eruncle, before the Brooklyn P'res- bytery, who think he needs disei- plining, commenced to-day.


25. Orange, Mass., has a $50,000 fire, destroying the factory of the Orunge Mannf. Co. and a saw and grist inill adjoining.


26. Mr. George D). Whittle, ex- treasurer and collector of Lynn, hus suddenly disappeared from that city.


29. Fires : The Tremant House, at Claremont, N. Il., destroyed. und tive persons burned to death ; Fairchild's block, in Madison, Wis., purtinly burned, causing an explosion, which killed two and injured fifteen others; nearly the entire business portion of Seneca, Ill., burned over.


30. At Allston Hall, in Boston, Miss Lulu Loomer completed her three hundred fourth quarter mile in as many consecutive quarter hours, and this evening was with- drawn from the track, on account of lameness.


31. The New England Home for Intemperate Women, at 112 Ken- dall street, Boston, was dedicated this evening.


31. The Behnont Oil Works, of Philadelphia, burned, involving a loss of 875,000. One man was fatally burned.


April.


1. The U. S. Senate passed a bill, appropriating $200,000 for the con- struetion of a vessel, to be provided with a refrigerating apparatus, for the disenfection of vessels and car- goes arriving from yellow fever ports.


1. The Oliver-Cameron breach of promise case, in which Mary S. Oliver sued Hon. Simon Cameron for $50,000, conelnded to-day, with a verdiet for the defendant.


2. Gov. Van Zandt re-elected in Rhode Island. The vote was as follows: Van Zandt, 9.718; Segar, 5,515: Hill and scattering, ar7;


2. Gardner Colby died at his residence in Newton, Mass., aged 68 years. He has been a liberal benefactor to Brown University nt Providence, Colby University at Waterville, Me., and other insti- tutions of learning and ehnrity.


2. Gen. Fitz John Porter is fully exonerated hy the military board


21. The treasurer of the Reading Savings Bank, Nathan B. Pratt, fur embezzlement of the bank's of inquiry, who have serupulously


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CHRONICLE OF EVENTS.


examined into his case, and they now (believing him to have been wrongfully condenmed in the court martial of 18663) recommend his restoration to former rank in the army.


3. John P. Phair, who was to be hung to-morrow at Windsor, Vt .. again reprieved by the governor of Vermont.


3. National Fast Day.


3. Dr. Charles Jewett, eminent as a temperance reformer, died this morning at Norwich, Conn., aged 71 years.


4. Madame Elizabeth Patterson Bonaparte, widow of Jerome Bon- aparte, who was brother of the first Napoleon, died at Baltimore, at an advanced age. She leaves property to her grandsons, Jeroine and Charles J. Bonaparte.


4. At a meeting of the Union Temple Baptist Church, Boston, Dr. Lorimer renewed his resigna- tion, and it was reluctantly ac- cepted. Dr. Lorimer goes to a Chicago church.


5. The last of the 5-20 bonds of 1865 were called in for re- demption, by Secretary Sherman, to-day.


5. The four-mile race between Cambridge and Oxford on the Thames River, England, was won by the former in 21 min. 18 sec.


6. A large fire in Philadelphia destroyed eighteen buildings, with a loss of nearly $1,000,000. One man was killed and several in- jured.


6. Cornelins Vanderbilt paid to the late Horace Greeley's two daughters $01,000, thus cancelling indebtedness for money borrowed fifteen years ago, with compound interest on the same.


7. The ninety-ninth anniversary of the birth of William Ellery Channing was commemorated in Newport, R. I., the city of his birth. Gov. Van Zandt presided. 8. The trial of persons charged with illegal voting at the last State election commenced in the U. S. District Court. Gen. Butier ap- prared for the defendants.


9. Rev. C. A. Tillinghast in- stalled pastor of the Broad-street Christian Church, Providence.


9. The Allen Print Works, Prov- idence, ask creditors an extension for three years.


10. John P. Phair was hung to- day at Bellows Falls, Vt. He per- sisted to the last that he was inno cent.




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