Portland Daily Press: July 13,1882

Portland Daily Press: July 13,1882

Pi) RTLA N D DAI LY v PRICE 3 CERTS. JUNE 1862--VOL. 20. PORTLAND, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 13, 1882. f^8Biii£9.^2£J ESTABLISHED 23, i—t ■nan m -- ...iniMurw.nrmwr""-™—■■——c—rr^Mnwnrerr— UMHifi ill MTTr—r—————^W—■>——— 1825. —David Sbepley, b. Norridgowock. June Ia Ohio and Illinois, three who now pursues bis studies without blood, and COMMENCEMENTS. 1, stated of Rev. Nathan Rev. Lincoln that ignorance is the mother of devotion, and Pennsylvania, 1804, d. Providence, K. I., Dec. 1, 1881; 77.J THE PORTLAND DAILY PRESS, BRIDGTON ACADEMY. Church, central is not with sole desire for improvement. This com- that devotion to these churches is the safety of great states where self support 1826. —William Tyng Hilliard, b. Gorham, Feb. Ripley and Sa.ruel Farnsworth. The Alumni the The chain that binds tbe Yet the seat of the Greek church, difficult, one in ten of the illiterates is a of Academy— d. Bangor, Nov, 9, 1881; 76. PubllBhol every day (Sundays excepted,) by mittee ono with like powors and duties, humanity. its to it's its with its 20, 1808, (or while of the rest of the on- present past; memories hopes. Alumni Associa- 1826. Yetton Sawver, b. N. number a where nine-tenths of the pauper, population, Bowdoin College—The —George Wakefield, but consisting of a different portion —Russia,- popula- Here, at our where the memory of the ft d. N. June PORTLAND PI BL1SHINU CO., Celebration of Its 75th Anniver- has this the one in three hundred is a pauper. In other Alma-Mater, Dec. 5, 1805, Nashua, H., 16, 1882; of the under a of the institution, tion are illiterate, very year made ly old is married to the of the new we of Memorial time) by-law a hopes graduates, tion Meeting—Dedication 77* the barbaric crimes commit- words, in those three great central states, to her renewed AT 97 Exchange St., Portland. has been elected annually ever since. In world shudder pledge devotion. 1827. —John Sleretfl Abbott, b. Temple, Jan. sary. tho of the given number of children suffered to grow up Hall—Necrology. 6, obedience to the instruction them, the ted in that empire upon brethren The Lady Graduates the Academy—They give to d. Maps., duly 12, 1881; 74. Ter-'vo Eight Dollars a Year. To mall snbBSMS given in times as many of 1807, Watertown, to founder of Christianity,—the Hebrews—rhe ignorance produce thirty the memory of our its beauty and poe- 1827.-John b. Portland, March 26, 1806; cr ■ f. ver, Milan a Year, if la advance. committee selected October 2d, 1810, procure school-days Owen, paid and of the paupers as when given an average commou- As the have their influence has (1. 76. a teacher, reported a contract with Hr. Beza- most intelligent thriving subjects try. years passed, Cambridge, Mass., April 22, 1882; ADDRESSES BEFORE THE ALUMNI. of the Greek •fshool education. multiplied, and to their charms they have made of 1830.—Jotham Tilden Moulton, b. Bucksport, leel Cushman, who was to commence the temporalfhead church. Brunswick, July 12.—Alpha Chapter THE MAINE STATE PRESS' fora thousand one of the most In 1870 a was made in addition by aiding us to solve that sweet problem of Oct. 8, 1808; d. Chicago, 111., Dec. 1881; 73. school in 1811. His contract was to receive all Ireland, years special investigation Maine, of the Phi Beta Kappa Society .held its ft 18 of the to the number of substraction, which through a “union of hearts,” 1834.—Samuel Clement Fessenden, b. New Glou- Is published every Thursday Morning at $2.60 the for tuition for the time in faithful devotees of the Church of Rome, has states, inmates, money being, of Of these from two makes one. annual at Adams Hall, Bowdoin Col- cester, March 7, 1815; <1. Stamford, Conn April, j&nr, if paid in adv&aco at $2.0C a year. This has been a gala day lor Bridgton, for such further the entire curriculum of crime 7(398, aims-hmises auk infirmaries. meeting part payment for his services, and just completed Tne The Puritan New 1882; 67 to debts, to mnrder in the 4J327, or nearly 59 per cent, could not read aud Clergy— settled England. this morning at 9 o’clock. A goodly hundreds who studied in the famous old acad- sums as he and the trustees agree upon from refusal pay as lege, 18d6.—Asahel b. Nov. 16, Kates of Ax>V3CttTihn,o: One inch of space, the might while in those 15 the His ministers buiL the sclioolhouse as well the Moore, Gardiner, should be first and made both life and write; states average per- number of members was The follow- d. Needham. 70. of constitutes a and were there, this to be paid from the first money that degrees, property church. Though he may have disliked Baptists and present. 1811; Mas!., April 16, 1882; engtb column, '‘square.** emy graduated gathered of illiterates was about 6 per cent- N. first 76 coots and to them after the liabili- unsafe within her borders. centage only Quakers he was a founder of a “Church with- classs were 1837.—Albert Ruter Hatch, b. Greenland, H., $1.60 per snuoro, daily week; per on in front due, paid existing then, ing persons from the graduating morning the beautiful grassy slope then that aud devotion of tho whole population. From this6 percent out a a in the Liber- Oct. 1817; d. Portsmouth, N. H., March 6, week after; three insertions or less, $1.00; continu- ties were liquidated. At this time Mr. Cush- It is clear ignorance Bishop, State without a King,” 10, 50 to A the came that 59 per cent, of the or, to al of his elected members of tho society: Melville 1882; 64. ing every other after tiret week, cents. of the Academy listen to the addresses. man was a student at Dartmouth Not will not bring on the millenum. Evidently paupers: day. day College. it number of 1844.-Samuel Porter b. Bangor, Oct. Half square, throe insertions or less, 75 cents; of what will the most express another form, a given The Bar and make its members Smith Hoi Wm. Alvin Arthur G. Dinsmore, platform had been built for the speakers. Tiie being quito through with hta course, he problem accomplish Study practice way, Moody, d. New March 1882; 58. one 60 cents per week after^ efficient of children in those 15 stales suffered to grow up revere and obedient to 29; 1823; York, 23, week, $1.00; a Blood from the same in- aud prevention precedent, respect Fran- — additional. Hon. Geo. Pierce, who has lived 83 to secured Mi. Samuel complete pauperism authority, Staples, Wm. Curtis Merriman, George 1844. Josiah Howes, b. New Sharon, Sept. 24, Special Notices, one-third years up and crime and produce the in- in ignorance, produced 22 times as many pau- forms. Yet in the davs of the Kevolution they “Amusements” and “Auction stitution, who came lien in 1811 and taught highest average Charles 1819: d. Clarinda, Iowa, llecember, 1881; 62. Undei head of The address of welcome was solv- pers as the same number of children would if made the best of Rebels, for no profession so well cis Bates, Herbert Harrison Chase, three inser- date, presided. one term and that term was Mr. crease of wealth aud morality, is not yet 1845. —Albah Black, b. Limington, Dec. 3, J817; Sales,” $2.00 per square per week; only, upon a knows that and form, were G. F. Farnsworth. The historical ad- ed. Its solution is difficult. One of tho best given fair common school education. precedent, authority, Eben Stinchfield, Eugene Timothy McCarthy, d. Paris, Jan. 29, 1882; 85. tions or leas. $1.50. given by Cushman’s contract. the made to protect, and not subvert, the of men. most that Similar results be obtained from rights 1847.—George Stevens Peters, b. Ellsworth, Adverti^meuts inserted in the ;‘Maine State Mr. was full of facts and So far as known, the only scholar living who teachers jjand Bcholarly gentlemen may Wallace Edward Mason. dress, by Kimball, to census of almost in and The Bench. —The judge stands between the State June 2,1826; d. Ellsworth, Oct. 6, 1881; 65. Puess (which has a large circulation in every part attended school at the term in a half century has had the good fortune every country Europe hon- and valuable to here, taught by and the citizen, as the arbiter of civil rights. His The following gentlemen were elected 1847.— John Cotton Smith, b. Andover, Mass., of the State), for $1.00 per square for first inser- statistics, interesting graduates a over this Soule—often America. Mr. Blood is Nathan W. Ilazen, Esq preside academy—Moses opinions modify, if they do not repeal and enact Aug. 4, 1626; d. New York, .Ian. 9, 1882; 66. tion, and 50 cents per square for each nbs uent to from Wo then that it is a orary members: Rev. Francis S. Thatcher, of the school and to others. Mr. a brother encouraped his pupils by quoting them may safely say general has him the to — Feb. inserion. entertaining lawyer residing at Andover, Mass., law. His position given power pre- 1865 Charles Henry Foster, b. Orono, 18, Torence the lines: law of modern civilization that an illiterate and Prof. Edward Stan- Address all communications to Kimball said: of Jacob Hazen of this village. serve tbe peace of society, protect it, alleviate ’66; Henry Johnson, '74; 1830; d. Philadelphia, March 13, 1882; 52.

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