CHEMICAL PAINT! G. H. DOUGLASS, ICS CREAM, Michigan Siding, E. J. H

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

CHEMICAL PAINT! G. H. DOUGLASS, ICS CREAM, Michigan Siding, E. J. H -• -rt^rrr '"'il' *'~ iii 4 ; <:;• j.j-'4-^; ,T*. -: { ,!»?• j'''tv|?. l*'»p J' •/.--•';- - •>' •?•* . •.-'; '•• • .' ' ' . ,• -. : . - %7% -• ^ WHOLE NUMBER 1525. NOR WALK, CONNECTICUT, TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1377. YOL. LX.--NUMBEB 14, RETURN TO NORWALK. Make me Loving. wisdom, rose from the ground with all the A Russian Romance. Memorial Services profit by these lessons of death, and become NORWALK GAZETTE, REAL^STATE. SONNET. nnHE subscriber, having returned to Norwalk, ... OF ...i good, honest,high-minded,moral young men, remaining dignity he could muster, and con­ PUBLISHED EVERT TUESDAY X bought out the Blacksmithing business at the Savior wlio in love divine Those that of late had fleeted far and fast It has often been said that the inventions of CHARLES V. BESSON. hating that which is evil and doing that To Rent. old established stand known as "Lamb's Shop," fronted a row of quivering faoes, vainly Main Street, is now fully prepared to do Came to bless a heart like mine,^ To touch all shores, now leaving to the skill the liveliest imagination of romance writers whi6h is good, following after righteousness, trying to pull themselves to their accustomed Died, March 12th, 1877. HORSE AMD OX SHOEING, Make my spirit now tliy slirine— wK-<wb' are always surpassed by the reality. The fol­ honoring your parents and honoring your d Oldest Paper in tlus State Of others their old craft, seaworthy still, length as their owners in quaking voices, be­ The Secon A Coal Yarfl in Complete drier • —AND— Make me loving, \ lowing is a new and curious proof of this say­ The Services were held in the Chapel of the God, if this should be the result, then, sad Have chartered this; where, mindful of the gan sympathizing with him over the knee FOR BUSINESS. Oarriago BX a> Is.1 JSL s < Make me mild, - - ^ :,u- O, ing. An officer of the engineer corps, who past, he fell to nursing directly. Perhaps line- Weston Military Institute, March 19th, though it was, and much as we grieve over, OFFICE IN GAZETTE BUILDING. in the best manner, and at low rates. Special at­ Let me be thine own dear child. has just arrived here (Odessa) from Kichenell Sheds, Scales, &c. Capacity for sto:oring 5,000 tons tention paid to Lame and Interfering Horses. Our true co-mates regather round the mast, looking young fellows from town are apt to ' at 2 p. m. it, we may yet be taught to learn, that Apply at the of of THE A. E. S.JllTil'S SONS'>NS' the head quarters of the Russian Army of POTTERY CO, lml3 EDWIN C. LLOYD. Very ffail and weak am I, Of diverse tongue, but with a common will be a trifle self-confident, and who shall say All the students and the Principal, and his "blessed to us was the death of Charles the South, relates in his own language this BeSson." A. H. BYINGTON & COi Oft forgetting thou art nigh; Here, in this roaring moon of daffodil this one was not taught a."lesson. Shall we associates being present; the Rev. E. To Rent. curious little history : A. H. BYINOTON, J. B. ELLS, G. N. ELLS. 1 8 7 *7 . Bear my prayer and swift reply— . And crocus, to put forth and brave the blast; not learn of calves since we are told to fiud: Lubkert,Pastor of the Congregational church, Gen. A. S. Jarvis in a few pertinent re­ mUE Homestead formerly the residence of For some, descending frcm the sacred peak There is nothing talked of down there at in his capacity 6f Chaplain of the Institue, A George Piatt, Esq., on hhoton Hill, within Make me loving, . , "Books in the running brooks, Richeileff but a most remantic incident. marks addressed his pupils in a very feeling ten minutes walk of depot South Norwalk, Conn. BUY YOUR% Of hoar high-templed Faith have leagued opened with a short prayer and delivered the Nice Country Hon^e, containing 17 Rooms, Bath Make me mild, Sermons in stones, Two years ago, at a masked ball in St. manner, exhorting them to do always right Subscription $2.00 per year, in advancc. room &c., all in good order. Farm House, Hot again And good in everything?" following address.' Let me be thine own dear child. • Petersburg, a blSi'k domino accosted Prince and giving them some very salutory advice, Single Copies 5 Cents. Their lot with ours to rove the world about; MY DEAR FRIENDS : Provisions, \ My letter has been strickly pastoral so far, D , an officer of the Ataminski regiment which, if the young gentlemen will only Ever watch about my home, And some are wilder comrades, sworn to seek It is with more than usual, al­ summer, or for the year. Possession immediate­ suggestive of Pandean pipes and warbling" of Cossacks, in these terms : "Hove you, follow it, can not but result in happy con­ ly. For terms, apply to Never let its dear ones roam If any golden harbor be for men most with a painful embarrassment that I K Groceries; birds I might say. I have not even mention­ sequences. Advertising Kates: ' GEORGE iKHOLMES, or E. P.WEED, Wherethe tempter's voices come— . : In seas of Death and sunless gulfs of Doubt. Prince ; will you love me ?" "Why not ? now rise to address you on this sad and Prof. C. A. Cole, spoke feelingly on the 3tlS Norwalk. Conn. ed Sukey, who actually remarked the other But, first, I should like to see what that Four lines or less, 1 insertion 50 cts.; 3 times 81 00 Make me loving, ' • —Alfred Tennyson, in the "Nineteen th Cen­ character of the deceased tad especially laid - 1 oo Poultry, day when surrounded by a few people, who solemn occasion. Lsay "sad" because the One Square, one insertion, - - - - "T"/. |a 4. —Four large pleasant rooms, with Tender, mild, '"'ff' ''' tury." sombre domino coveltfe "Not so fast; - • 50- were, perhaps, a little pedantic, that she circumstances which have brought us togeth­ stress upon the point of manliness in his Per week, for continuance, - - - i IO LC I. Sinkroom,Pantry,and Closets, on consent, at first, to answer my question." - 7 00 second floor; rent low to a small family, Enqifire CROCKERY AND GLASS f ABE, Let me be thine own dear child. * ~ thought it "wonderfully refreshing to meet er are still too fresh in our memory and too character as combining all the true elements One Square, Six Months, - - - - - of E.H. F1LLOW, near Union Schpol. ' 3t*lU Briersville Sketches. "What! love you without knowing whether " " one year—with paper - 15 00 ! vivid to be lightly dismissed from our minds, of a successful life. - 25 00 Fiiiijts, Nuts, etc. Through the hours of the day, 'W.s' a fool, sometimes," but I think I had better you are pretty or ugly, young or old ?" Two « " " " " p 4 A Cottage containing nine rooms, an3 I say "solemn," inasmuch as it would Mr. Comstock cheerfully corroborated all - 3000 on "When I study, work or play, ragf:;'-> v: DEAR GAZETTE :—I believe I do not make let one letter go without saying much about "Yes." Three" " " " " - I VJ nCI I L. with garden attached. Apply to IS indicate a lightness of heart and an apathetic, that had been said, r ji Quarter of a Column, one time, - - -5 00 MRS. CATHERINE STEVENS, Close to thee I fain would stay. ; 1' a practice of falling' out with the weather, her not but there is enough to say Prince D. broke out into a loud laugh, • 3t*12 Prospect Hill. (Fresh, Salted and Canned.) state of mind, if any of you could at this Some of the school-mates of the departed One quarter column, one year, -- - 50 00 Make me loving, ;> n provided there is a cheerful atmosphere with­ but -— friends, I take back all I said about which was not very proper, as he himself . 10 00 time utterly disregard the solemnity of the having spoken a few words in his memory, One half Column, oho time, - - - Tender, mild, ; in doors, but, about this time, one does begin her nose; please forget it. Indeed, when - 80 00 To Rent. (Opened or in the Shell.) confessed, and, between two peals of laugh­ One half Coflkmn, one year, - - - Let me be thine own dear child. a' to have such an overpowering longing for the you think of Sukey I would rather you would occasion and sit here with coldness and in­ the whole audience united in the Lord's Full Column, One time, - - - - - - 20 00 small cottage 8 rooms opposite residence of ter, he replied : "Well, yes, I will love difference. prayer and was dismissed with the- benedic­ 15000 A J.PAN TON. Esq.,Broad River. Large gar­ CLAMS,d!C. —Christian at Work. -; i. spring, and, without, the mud is quite dis­ think she hasn't any nose at all. It would you; will you lay aside that rag, no^" Full Column, one year, - - - - - den and plot of ground with it. Rent low. • heartening, one cannot walk unless one takes have been better for me had she never pos­ What transpired a week ago In this place, tion by the Chaplain. 12 Apply C o ROBERT, ELLS. ALSO i He sought to unmask the unknown, bunKic. One inch space constitutes a square.. Beware of "Crooked Wliiskey. to the stone fences, driving simply worries sessed one ? when they carried away our young friend— Vegetables of all Kinds, recoiled, saying, "Now less than every ; I PUBLIC ACTS OF THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT 25 percent;advance To Rent.
Recommended publications
  • Las Vegas Daily Optic, 06-23-1903 the Las Vegas Publishing Co
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Las Vegas Daily Optic, 1896-1907 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 6-23-1903 Las Vegas Daily Optic, 06-23-1903 The Las Vegas Publishing Co. & The eopleP 's Paper Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/lvdo_news Recommended Citation The Las Vegas Publishing Co. & The eP ople's Paper. "Las Vegas Daily Optic, 06-23-1903." (1903). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ lvdo_news/650 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Las Vegas Daily Optic, 1896-1907 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. If THE LAS YJBOAS BAILY OPTIC O VOL. XXIV. LAS VEGAS, NEW MEXICO, TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 23. 1903 , , NO. IGfi i M'MILLAN'S BATTLE, ARGUMENT FOR FLEET AT KIEL RECEIVER, FAILURE OF INFLUENTIAL MEN A The United States Shipbuilding Re AT STAKE TO SAVE THE MAN WHO SOIL SNAKE CRASS ceivership Case on Trial at M ED HIS ERMINE. IB1I Newark, Smith, One- cf the Best Known Law ALWAKn, n. j., Juno 23. Argu in uumt or United States European Squad yers Michigan, Highly Thought counsel iu the suit for the cf by Department of Justice. appointment of a receiver for the Delaware Mob of 5,000 Wreaks ron at German Port is Re-- . United States Shipbuilding company V to Letter Sent was Terrible engeance on ceived with Honor Special The Optic: Anonymous Abroad, a Copy of heard today before United States WASHINGTON, D.
    [Show full text]
  • Everyone Knows T.M. Winters, M.D
    VOL. XLV-NO. 11 MASON, MICH., THURSDAY, MARCH 12.1903. WHOLE NO. 3203. WEWH IN RRIEP. Mrs. Mary Searl has rented the Ad* W. C. T. U. Convention. kiuH house on Okemos street. EVERYONE KNOWS The weather of the paat week bears As there la liable to be some w The annual convention of the sixth Church and Society. IndlcHthin of an early Hpring. LOST—A pair of nose glasses. Find­ district of the Woman's Christian Wtmt Dry Hot Air Ballis will rto for er leave at this office and receive re­ confusion in arranging our sub- ' Temperance Union will be held lu the ull liiiMlH of UlteiiinatiHiii, Specific DiH> A blK muHkral waa hilled In front ward. • sorlptlon list to the new rural Presbyterian church In this city next msoH, diaeaBeH of tlie aliin itnd blood, of the armory laat Saturday. There will te work on the E. A. de­ A number of Mason tlieatre lovers routes, wo would ask our stiib- week, commencing Tuesday at 1:30 p. gree at Masonic ball Tuesday evening, «nlHrge(l JoiiilM, acute colda, IsKfippe M. A. Randall haa moved Into hia m. and closing at noon Thursday. and cnridilioiiH dependent on olMseity will attend "Miss Simplicity" by scribers, so far as they can, to in­ March 17. new reMidence on Maple street. Frank Daniels at Lansing tomorrow Tuesday afternoon Mrs. A. S. Benja­ <too niuuli fat) and any otlier coiidi- form us by postal card or other­ The Ys will meet in the parlor of linim CHUiied liy non-elitiiinalion of Next Saturday, apecial sale on coffee evening.
    [Show full text]
  • Robert Olds of Windsor and Suffield, CT and His Descendants
    Robert Olds of Windsor and Suffield, CT and his descendants An evolving electronic document by Dan W. Olds Spartanburg, SC June 18, 2002 PREFACE The family of Robert Old of Windsor and Suffield, CT, has been most fully reported in The Olds (Old, Ould) Family in England and America by Edson B. Olds (Washington, DC, 1915). That publication provides the family structure for most of this document. Edson B. Olds’ work, although mostly correct, provides rather little in terms of documentation – at least by the standards of today. Of course, it also provides nothing on later generations. The greatly increased availability of genealogical materia l in the for m of family history books, abstracted public and private documents, indices and other research aids, and the wide range of internet data collections and correspondence encourages the hope of improving upon the work of E. B. Olds. I began that attempt over fifty years ago and one result is this document. There are now at least thirteen generations of this Olds family in America. The immigrant Robert Olds had fourteen known children and fifty-five known grandchildren. All of these were born with the surname Old(s). Using a factor of 50 for each two generations yields a calculated 15 billion descendants by generation 13. This did not happen, even with the presumed duplications for multiple lines of descent, but is an example from the puzzle I pose for myself about the proper scope for this project. Should it be have a limited goal and, if so, what? Among other ways, the project might reasonably be limited by date (all descendants born before 1850, perhaps), by generation (through the eighth generation, say), by surname (only those inheriting the Olds surname, perhaps), or (even more egocentrically) by closeness to my own line of descent (my ancestors and their siblings, perhaps).
    [Show full text]
  • Family of Robert 61 Family of Hanford 89 Family of William 129 Family of John
    The Olds (Old, Ould) Family IN England and America American Genealogy by EDSON B. OLDS English Pedigree by MISS SUSAN S. GASCOYNE OLD of Loadoa, Englaz,d Compiled aad Publi,hed by EDSON a. OLDS WASHINGTON. D. C. I~ I 5 Eotered ac:conlin• to Act cl Coo;r... , in the.,._, 1915 B1 EDSON B. OLDS lo cha ol!ice cl the l_jl,,.riao of Co..,... al Washi■ atoa PREFACE ITH some trepidation I have approached the task of compiling a genealogy of the Olds family. The data has been in many in­ ID stances so fragmentary that at first it seemed almost impossible to make a coherent book. Even now I have received many fragments which it has been impossible to connect with the main line.•- On this account some blank leaves are provided in the back of the book so that those members of the family who do not find their names in the genealogy may record their line should they discover it later. Some of the more important of these fragments have been placed after the connected lines. For many years several members of the family had been collecting data regarding the descent from Robert Ould, but had not discovered the English connection. By good fortune I was enabled to find this and obtain the English pedigree, which has been contributed by Miss S. S. Gascoyne Old, of London, who is in posses­ sion of the family records which have been handed down for many years. The thanks of all the members of the American branch sl1ould be extended to her.
    [Show full text]
  • BRIGHT SHENG Composer, Conductor, Pianist Exclusive Publiser Personal Manager G Schirmer Inc. Lois Jecklin 257 Park Avenue
    BRIGHT SHENG composer, conductor, pianist exclusive publiser personal manager G Schirmer Inc. Lois Jecklin 257 Park Avenue South 1232 27th ST. NW NY NY 10010 Washington DC 20007 212-254-2100 202 337 4370 212-254-2013 (fax) 202 337 4371 (fax) www.Schirmer.com [email protected] work School of Music University of Michigan 1100 Baits Dr. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 734-647-9413 734-763-5097 (fax) E-mail: [email protected] POSITIONS 1995-present the Leonard Bernstein Distinguished University Professor of Music, School of Music, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 2006 & 2007 Composer-in-Residence, New York City Ballet 2004-2005 Helmut F. Stern Professor Fellow, Institute for the Humanities, University of Michigan 1998-2003 Artistic Advisor, Silk Road Project Inc. 2002-2003 Composer-in-Residence, Mannes College of Music 2003-2004 Composer-in-Residence, Brevard Music Center, NC 1996-present Honorary Professorship, Wuhan Conservatory of Music, Wuhan, China 2002 Director, Festival of Contemporary Music, Tanglewood Music Center 2002 Master Artist, Atlantic Center for the Arts 2001-2002 Composer-in-Residence, Washington Performance Arts Society 2001 Composer-in-Residence, Tanglewood Music Center 2000-2001 Director, Pacifika Music Festival, Seattle Symphony 2000-2001 Composer-in-Residence, Seattle Symphony 1997-2004 Artistic Advisor, Queens Symphony Orchestra 1992-95 Composer-in-Residence, Seattle Symphony 1994-95 Artist-in-Residence, University of Washington 1 1989-92 Composer-in-Residence, Lyric Opera of Chicago 1998 Composer-in-Residence, Bravo! Colorado
    [Show full text]