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which it ‘excited. ‘It was unques- <the igem ot the evening. “The House of B. W. Tompkins, Esa., ‘was-asforilliant as brilliant lizhts, and & groat.many- of them, could make it. ‘The large heuse of General Wiillams JAlso was lignted wp_throughout; and C fine residence of Capt. Erastus Wil- Th N 4 Ihm"vt:lfln :' ;:flecj. blaze, On Broad 6 4 5 T RO | street the" residence of Mr. Charles 1. : Cooley, alse that of the writer, just | ol B wp_“:.:'::.o‘"' apposite, were illuminated—in the for- | Tl < An Army, Rifle Co e vt W mer case the number of lights at each the' First Boat window corresponding to the number o B . of panes of glass. The house of Hon s 5o " ter. N C:'W.. Rockwell presented a fne ap- - . pearance an¢ was greeied as were very | The gunboat Norwich, built at the many others by the procession with yapd of T. Wetmare & Co.,.in this city, @prolenged and repeated cheers. Ameng { 861, carried the heaviest armament the dwellings on Broadway, although of any gunboat of her sizé that had every one, or nearly every one, was been pyt in commigsion during the handsomely illuminated, there were | war,, consisting of four sixty-feur three “which elicited much admiration pounders on her gundeck, and a twen- —Col. George Perkins', Mr. Frank ty-pounder Parrott rifie gun on her fore " Johnson's and Mr., Russell Hubbard's. . castle deck. The lieutenant command- Mr. Johnson's especially was as unique ing was J. M. Duncan. .+ . . As we passed down Washing. James D. Mowry of this city receiv ton street about half after eight o'cloc ed a contract from the United States in the ng, pretty much about al: government for 30,000 rifle muskets, West Side was streaming and spa after the latest Springfield model, As Ying with light; and conspicuous and theré was no manufactory in town pre-eminent among them all was the where all the work could be done, the large ansion of Capt. Wm. W. Coit barrels were made at Cole & Walk- “The American House, kept by M. er's larze machine shop on the corner Downer, was splendidly illuminated | of Willow_and_Franklin streets, the and finally,"lastly and to conclude, so | locks at C: B, Rogers & Co.s on the ‘was the Courierioffice. On two of the West Side, the other pleces at the shop central windows , the la T of the Messrs. Mowry, in Greeneville. were traced in fire, whi! ds, —_—— “WE TOLD YOU SO shone out from o The steamer W. W. Coit, General w transparency between them. Ths | e | Gilmore's, staff boat, was the first to other windows were brilliant with e 4 | runy up Charleston harbor after the lights equal in number to the panes | rebels had abandoned the forts. Pos- of glass—ghese lights continued to | 4 . session was at once taken of Fort burn bright and clear till nine and Sumter, and the flag was hauled down ®alf o'clpck, when they were n . : from the steamer to be holsted by guished, with malice . b, ; Captain Brass of General Gllmore's “devil.’ stail over the abandoned werk. They “After the Prosession and othe made a staff by lashing together an o-door doings were over, | oar and boathook, and upen this they of about 100 gentiemen good & Whig supper by mine host of the “American any, ‘even the 'most fastidious, Whi3 could desire. So we are assured.” CITY IMPROVEMENTS, 1852-2853. fastened the jensign and flung it to t » brecze from the ramparts of Fort Sumter. ‘The Goit was built for ahd was owhed by Capt. William W. Coit of this city, who, had the flag carefully preserved as an honored relic of the times of the great rebellion. THE COURT HOUSE FIRE. A Meeting for Selecting Sites—Union Square Site Decided Upon—Judg Holbreok and the Model Court House. Improvemept of Streots and Walks— Ambitieus Residences for Upper Broadway — Erection of the Wau- regan House—New Bank Building. ¢ s o '« « On the anniversary of our | indopendence, 1t*hecame our duty, as well as jpleasure, to stroll through our strests, ‘and weiwere both pleased and surprisedytoisee,in how maiy respects, #Norwioh was changed and changing Sor the$ better. Through Frank astreot, {the inumher ‘of new tenemen Jettall Fvuthment,"and *many of them | i tastefulias swell asjcomfortable. spoke 3 TR ¢ oudly ;fordthe jproperity. of ‘that. class | More enduring and imposing.”—Nor- 1l, 1865, completely urt A fire, in_ Ap SgE Ly S 42N , burned put the interior of the Greeneville as Viewed from Preston in 1829 y | R afi il one exterior wooawor — pany worked briskly during the aft % P . | erncon removing the chimneys and had: been furnished by Norwich. All | guch portions of the walls as seemed T of the community"— | the street lamps when there was a |'in feet we are unable to give, but it is | _“Launched under such aus o = e surest de. | Wich Courier, April 12, 1853. orwich Courier, Sept 1853 moon, and the citizens on- the other | to be large enough to seat 1,600 people, | Bulletin may reasonably anti a? of!them took.part in“the battle of Bull | in danger+of falling. an?;nlg:’m’}xf'an g e B | ¥ blaming him if he did not light them | and Setkt & peah to take 1 2000, Tt future as brilliant as the present is | Run. where the regiments from Con- | The bullding was-erected in 1828, on gl # ess, n6 meohanics and | “There have been made, within two | THE TOWN'S GROWTH. dark and stormy nights, evan if ‘there |is to be cempleted’and ready for occu- | promising.” necticut saw some of the-hardest ser- | contract by Felix Durkee. The town . “"Bhie’ side-pavements in | weeks past, some sales oftreal estate - was a moon. He meant te do his duty, | pancy by the ‘st day of September, | - — | vice. Freshi calls:for troops in 1861 of Norwich owned the, property, occu- ydandFWashington street, in | In ourstown:that aresgratifying to eur | The Grand List—The Banks, Etc. | but hé wanted to'have his duty in this | 1359—that i our great | PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN OF 1860 | anc 1362 were answered immediately, | pying tho lower floor as a town null Jmest Tnstances~so handsomely iald | pride as citizens ?inasmuch as they I regard more clearly defined. He knew | centennial c 2 and full’quotas sent out with contribu- | while the county had a perpetual leass with]goed.stone,: cannot’ fail to attract”| betoken the factfthat Norwic] attendion, ‘even nowithat they,are no | ing up.again, after the Tew Songer new—and to awaken the fdesire | depression-and dullness threugh which |'only able to announce the number ‘and purpese to have“them extended, | she has passed. In a business point | inhabitants, which is 14,053 The poj until good stone walks are to be feund | of view, our new Hotel, now leoming | ulation for the last 30 years may be | e - opened ‘on the | Clubs Organized—Cassius M. Clay of | tions of money and supplies. of the second story for a_court room A Norwich furnished one hundred and | with adjoining jury, sheriff and ante- . 20, 1860, With | Kentucky and Abe Lincoln Speakers s turnished by | gense Elsction Nights | thirty-seven officers to the service dur- | rooms. In 1840 the pells were perma- —Scenes Election Night. | ing-the war, including three generals | nently located in. the town hall. the 1ging—chorus Dagcl: Wan: inde:] | (Tyler, Birge and Harland), five colo- | voting anteritor to that time-alternat is look. | “The census of the town of Norwich | that on Wednesday nigh{ it was dark | The hall was fin are of | is now completed, but we.are today | cnough to make'it necessary to light | evening of Monday. the lamps, but he had no power under | a socis] lev the present contract with the company | the Gi 10 do so. solos. Con, 4 | i A 5 | i Be | With the opening of the oresidential | (.t T e A0 ety cient | s aANALh o ‘on bakh, sides of 'every 'street in our | up two orie b, and already | thus stated: by John. T. “Wait, ‘ad@séssed . to = Mr : gl roerion | | nels, seves ant colonels, eight | ing between up and down town. The {city “limits, | promising @ fine appearance -as an 1830 1840 1850 1860 | The Wauregan house, commenced | Brees, thanking Bim. on behalf of the garonsipe Aty 1860 the excitement In | majors, eight adjutants, seven sur- |loss by the fire #f the town was esti- & § 5, 7,239 10,256 14,053 two ‘or- three vears earlier, was com- | citizens. of Norwich for his energy and |~ i 0 Was ey geons, forty-five captains and fifty ' mated at from $5,000 to-$6,000. There public meeting was held in Breed hall n February of \th fore in the city 'of been 50 large and enth ical meeting within the walls of any | ng the hall, fol *rom 1830 to 1840, increase 40yper cent. | Pleted in. 183G and the levee under the | enterprise In build From 1840 to 1850, increase 42 per cent, | #uspices of the ladies of Norwich, and | by a reply by M Frem 1850 to 1860, increase per cent. | to whigh the public \\;Fl*r in \11\-.1,; as | songs Miss Emma Bulke P " X 4 _ neld on the evening of Tuesdav -Feb. | Mr. Breed with a heal In 1840 the city proper contained | ¢ e 2 20 t S INAGE. that g 20, 1855. Tickets, admitting gentleman | flowers, the gift of “the boys and girls : R o the hauy e 4200. It is now twice that aMount. | u;g jady, §3; gentleman and two ladies, | of Norwich. [ e s | 's( io\dnnl ‘L\l :'x’u'l & we IHd. hoped L %8s VeLionaly. “esSmatid ot | :'v‘ E “)’l A\Trm into .lhl‘ hall mli‘ I Would be, but we must consider | 3 I D e namber | [ 8877 orclock every. seat was filed on | h ton wart of 1t has been sn | from 350 to 500. Speeches of congrat-| - THE NORWICH BULLETIN. & 3 aelie i o years, and that odr town i o as the floor and in the gallery andsall | aton e made befere ihe feast by | The first issue of The Morning Bul- | available standing room about the han is now 'increasing with a rapidity W, letin, in De nbe wholly unexampled. Our present ever be- | had there | siastic a pollt- ¢ yes , 1838, was thus an- | rully occupied. The galleries were al- nounced by The Couries B most entirely occupied b |m‘|l(‘>. Thm»ni population is larger than Hartford R “A new candidate for public Faver | were not less than 1,800 people present and gbout the same as New Haven, in | A'REAL ‘BUILIING BOOM: | and fame made its appearance in this | during the evening, and after the hall | 1840."—Norwich Courier, Sept. 25, 1860. | These buildings had recently been |city Wednesday morning, - under the | was filled scores ent from the door | ' oxs | erected: title of the ‘Morning Bulletin,” publish- | disappointed at not being able to nam‘ White. The arand.list of the city and 'town | "The Wauregan house, corner. Main |ed by Manning, Perry & Co. an_entrance. of Norwich for 1858 showed that there | ang Union; $50,000 b H. H. Starkweather was appointed | amed dwelling house on Broad | Isaac Bromley and Homer being understood to con: | Were 1,522 dweilinz houses, valued at | I chairman and Charles F. Denion sec- ’ $2,691,188; 14447 actes of land, val- | street for Charle® Tracy, Esq., $6,000. | with one exception, s. | retary. | ued At 3863464 stores, worth | Framed dwelling house on ~Broad | The editorjal management of The Bul- | Mr. Starkweather stated that one of | \ $602,240; 51 ma tories worth | street for C. C. Brand, villa- style, | letin is in the hands of Mr. Bi the objects of the meeting was to per- | $573,450; 628 horses, worth -330.847; | tower in front, $10,000. | who is quite too well known in Nor- | fect the orgamization of a campaign | 1,196 neat cattlé, worth § 2 Primary schoolhouse on Broad street, | wich to require an introduction. That | club, | sheep and swine. worth 31437: ome_story, wood, $3,000. |'ne will make a decidedly spirited paper | On motion of Amos ~W. Prentice, | carriages, worth $36,163; and 518 time- |~ Two story brick dwelling houss on | will hardly be doubted by any who | Esq. a committee of five was appoint- | i worth $16461; in insurance | Franklin street for H. Walker, “very know him—certainly it will not by any | ed o decide upon a name for the qlub | $109,100; in other stock $85.« 2 and report a list of permanent officers. money_at interest. $310, all Me ‘Arnos W. Prentice, 3. D. Mow- | | other texudle property, $1,203,42 - . Partridge, Edward Hunter polls, 1,611: amount taxed by the as- and Charles Bliss were appointed such | sessors, $229,490. committee 2 tter consultation the committee re- | | _With the comina of the year 1860 o el et ke el The Norwich was becinning to assume Buckingham Campaign Club' of~Nor- | mor V‘-’""Nvl:'.mudf'\{‘p:‘lv:f:;:n‘x‘: wich, Henry F. Starkweather was| , | Hotel and Postoficc” had been widen- | \ At Halt g ot 7 Cassius M. Clay, “the Old Norwich Bank and View into Franklin Square—1875. '”f" Oak g “w'} 4;;"_"";“"»":!?:, 15"2{ gallant son of Kentucky.” u:wvn-d’(hr; d lot or klin street had | Jrall and took the stand, where held The _more ambitious residences in | ay.pitec it il d ; n onened as the Franklin streef the undjvided aftention of the vast hs- ut aireadyrhome-like -looking dwell- | Toanklin street. and at the Faile. one | known as lower Broadway, had been a7 -_— WHBT ! SIOK “COVIR, BTAJATI = Supew: Bg(of-ouritownsman, Amos W. Pren- | cnjarged facilities for steam -power as | Straightencd. and fences set back in w March 9 ting in the T ! eice, .Esg. bare, in -theirsfresh white | o rarbpa, tacili e a$|line with “the steps in front of the On March 9 a_meeting in the Town | io,ttnants, a record equalled by but|was no insurance on the propesty, as dfgreen : blinds, - pleasant ob- i e AT e tell a good | By ptist meeting house | hall was addressed by Abraham = | few cities. the Aetna.Co. of Hartford, who for- itsitofitheteye. ‘In progress of build- | - The wurohesy o Ve ks = | Tf‘l:» gl republican candidate for| "4 4 jllustration of the general feel- merly !;ad'!’.‘.oofl on the building, had Ang, wejobservedithe <tillimore clab o o 0 i ; oresident o | ing in the city may be quoted ,these | declined, some years earlier, to con- Borgte Ghelings ofMy. Bdwarg Abbet undiviaed helt e Ate | Infociibaii e ‘ “The meeting was a perfect jam. The | 105 1! Ehe gty By bO Q0o e | e the policy on ccount of its SUPNISS of 3. Newton ' Ferking, Beq.. | oo cLooy, Of the Merchants® Hotel. | Uom Hhe oo 0 O e rted 13 hall was filleq to its utmost capacity, | ing the editorial chair of'The Morning | dilapidated state. The grand jury in- 3.both! of which are 0 be the ProPerty | Fenowation of the Lome L0 & complete | 0 B hanl. was orsanized at and hundreds went away from the | Byjietin for active service at the front: | dicted the'building as a common nus- [for men whose tasto cannot be aues- | yirtenances on Chirch streety. fta . | Braman's tavern on the Plain, but for i [ Avirs: disspatutel At Dying: unsbis — - ance, and such it had generally been [§tionedand whose permanent residence | Lation giving it a sreat fivantese| Some time the banking room was the e “GOOD-BYE. sl fecedy Ui e o condiaer a5 sriong " ing | S2L0% EIVINE ¥ & grest advantage, some tine the banking room was he “Mr. Lincoln was received upon his GOOD-BY! | Vdecided improvements of the last'few hd the beautiful view from its | Huntington. In 1523 plans were made e o e oo oneed "% nd | “With the present number of The | A town mesting held at Tread- Ryears. #Norisheuld be forget the be windows. But # v e les | for the erection of the building which applaue, loud and =prolonged; and|p .60 oo immediate connection with | way's hall, Water street, to consider dfhomesteadiof the late Capt. Rey- | np ouis oerty that ot aniaet | stooRetor 8g anany. vears on Shetudket | when he iwas introduced the enthusi- | /%t Ml S cease. I cannot | the subjects of petitioning the next fotdjtanding as & does a monument | £ braics moncion toane Wnas orTie | steedk ncay His junction with = Maf asm of the audlence knew mo bounds. | ;' don the chair editorial, however, | general assembly to make Norwich the o his “taste,yand awakening In the | nesutiral lot owned b Mrs, Heriariy | stre 7 . - Cheer after cheer went up for the noble | Lyl I, tag; e o0d-bye to those who | Bolg shire town of. New London couns Eneart*of the beholder a sigh for his e e B o omaaat | B e bigned Cabilthos o champlon of republican principles and | r ) the past four yvears have been my | ty, and of the erection of i new. tow I end.—Nomwich Courier, July | Loy 7%, 00 Washington streat, just | ‘The undersigned Committee from some minutes elapsed before the ap-| ove ' ol 0", Milence, and, 1 be- | hall and court hpuse. ~Several’ sites V14,1852, | gentleman_of fortune, Mr. T. Black- |posals, in writing, for building a Bank- e e o alOW/| jjeve, my very good friends. For the | gere ymw::;-‘d—‘lh?:' = r;“;m':";'(.‘:m; Sy et ston ke ention wo. tnder- PIng-house of Brick, o e following e B R et B et . s ghitee onths ave sat in | Snow property, e THE NEW. WOTEL—THE WAURE. |Z0n% (Whose inteqtion we. under- fling-house of Brick, of the following | £y oWhen quiet hed been restored, Mr. | {5t SENECH MOWLE [ UL {"to ve | place, the lot owned by Mrs. Chap- 4 GAN HOUSE, ) for the sum of $10000: | front: forty-five fect in length; fifteen Jasted nearly two hours, during which | mY_sphere of duty done wiiat I could | man, e~ gy -~ r { — sidence of . Whitaker, | feet high: clevated four fect from the | he was listened to with unflagging at- | £ fill up the ranks of the Union ammys | lace, on the corner of Bromd- e o o AROWn ooxatianc. :ne, at the price of abouf | Stregt, with underpinning in sfront of | tention | to inspirit the brave men in the field, [ Noyes place. on < e ed yesterday,on the site of the pros- that of the lot in Broadway § tone; to have one brick part- | 2 =5 | and to‘encourage those whose beating ( way and Willow sivsel whers the ol ¢ o Bl et o AN litving ‘omd the (1 e R st | tion: a stone floor; stone vault; amd & > hearts throbbed anxiously, to eve oap facto ed to X - | Sucgessive generations, st®od sentincl| {TOm seven to eight acres, sold by J. P TINGTON, Jitief. ovibec by Dotli Taaties tollowed | { on ‘the corner of Main “and Unigh-4H. Perkins -to L. F. S. Foster, Esq N L. W ELL with increasing enthusiasm. We read { streets, witnessing, unmoved, the foF $4500: also one on Broadway, lying SEEPH AVILLLA e e A (b of Norwich,” the “Buckingham Vigil- | ants,” later known as the “Republican Wide Awakes of Norwich,” the “Che- chances and changes which have come, | Just north of the residence of Capt “GEORGE L. PERKINS, not'exactly to its next door neighbors, Wililams, and sold by him to David “Committee.” & / o pultepec. club” and the RO R —Norwich Courier, June 10, 1523, club. | { N The Thames bank was ineofporated B — : | n_ 1825 -'“ly Q\u;.‘.hutjl!: u‘urt‘sy\l\_udj‘ | The Morning Bulletin thus describes | . i b Mo S B i W8 WATER STREET IN DAYS OF MOURNING. the night of the election in Norwich: | B .- L e oy T khu\ ,\‘ an! Hx‘u‘ SN Z R ; “Norwich broke loose from the moor- bk i 1852 the | plain_ and chaste design.” $10,000 | who know him intimately. Mr, Brom- | ingg last night, ‘The city wis all eager- | Sk e o) Three story brick building on Frank- | ley comes to his task, too, with the ad- | ness to hear the result of the great Norwich Savings 1ggle of the day. At an carly hour lo *hall crowded with a*dense mass of people, so that finally the au- dience adjourned to Breed's hall, more extended accommodations. The lin street for a sash and blind factory | vanfage of some experience in editorial for Myers & Bailey, $4.000. | life and-labors. He was, if we rightly Two story brick dweHing house on | remember, the writing editor for a con- oadway for Hon. L. F. S. Foster, |siderable time of the ‘State Guard’ and 186 the lot on apt. James street owned by | a few doo south of the ch bank - corner egular villa style. $13,000. American® paper, formerly published in | ™ Tgrirass g gy oA e with the large two-story frame dwell- | Norwich Free Academy on-Broad- | this city by an enterprising young man | Ietrns as they came in appeared t . n; se. and the building occupied | way, $35,000. named Andrew Stark. In fact he was, | SISty the cfotf for the whdest| ‘ by James Pussey's tafloring establigh Two story “villa mansion” on Broad- | we believe, the last editor the paper in | SHCTINE Custed Which we =20~ had & ment standing thercon. The ot had | way for Mr, David Smith, Croton brick | question had. If his labors on that | JPPOTUULY 10 BEAL THe retuins from sixty feet front, and the price”paid | \with freestone dressings, $25000. journdl_ failed to bring. him fortune, | YW, FOU (oREHAE PIOSHCEE B Most : s ¥5,000. The old bulidings were | Iramed dwelling housc for Mr.Ware- | they brought him what may perhaps | Vonderful effect. 'Wor nearly ten min- torn. down or removed, and a hand- | ham Willlams on Broadway, $7,000. be. reckoned an - equivalent—they | UfeS there Wi Shd o, 2k ‘sial § | seme. brick or granite building to be | Ceniral ‘grammar. sehooilouse on | brought him fame. If fate so dyucea NS . T NT e s ecupied as a ban house by -the | Broadway, $25,000. |4t “that he wasith see .the . ‘Guard’ | “Cepcery man. coderatulate Siint | Thames bank erected upon ‘the lot.| Three story brick building on Broad- | ground arms, and find devolved upon | . EVEry, man. congratulated = every| The Norwich Savings bank united with | way for L. & E. Edwards for a book | himself the melancholy duty of writing | Lher, within hdiling distance. and a | the Thames in ¢he purchase of the | pindery, $5g00. | the_epitaph of so sturdy a defender of | to8ther TUIe TrORT Sppeitied. decidedly | | 10t and _erection of the building. | "Ttatian Hlla on Washington street | ‘Americanism,’ he may console himself | S4. Between 11 and 12.o'clock the | The Chelsca Savinss purchased | for J. N. Perkins, Bsa., $15,000. with tae reflection that many a man of | “ToWd imInIThEd enoush, to make it | of Horace Colton the vacant lot on | Ttailan frame house’ near Norwich | perhaps equal genfug and editorial ca- profita adjourn again-to Apollo ¢ Shetucket stre wo. or three doors for Capt.. Charles L. Reynolds, | pacity has passed through a similar PO E A | zouth of the Norwich bavs. and ad- experience, and’ been all the wiser and | More and favorable returns were re. 3 | joining the “lot purchascd by the i housey Swiss style; corner of | ger for it. bt ot s ! | Than hank Adioining the ot | igton and ,Sachem streets, for | r are the assoclates of My. Brom- | POsiblc. SUPL Tore Intense. Bonflres OLD S0 "I, NORMNG Trwis X jurchased nes bank and o s 7,600, pll, o o e newspaper pusi- | o G Lided on i yy 3 4 | Norwieh ings bank. The three fidence: oy Pl S Ripley 44 ]\ll.:\m:m:'h a5 Tor 4 consid. | the jubilation continued until Gavlight | ,cod .others to go, until for very | was that they were not suited for the [ corporations united. in the erection of | nenr Norwieh Town, $6,000. ber of years foreman of The | S4Whed upon a nation joyous i the | Gidie"of keeping in the background:| pu bechtne unpleanant in posis ¢ | A handsome tHree-story huildhig to | 1n December, 1858, The Coutier gives and we take pleasure in | (ohscIGUsness that an honest man had | yygelf while pushing others forward, | tion or tuo limited n extent Old Store Built in 17th Century—Town Post Office in 1833, { over the whole eround, thy “waterial | the following announcement * of = the | saying that the «dutles of that post {‘I‘ S copubii to the chief maglstracy of | |"ave enlisted my own hand where | Four sites were named, which, in h | to e yellow stoy i'he ames | plans for the buildine of Breed hall: | were always well and worthily dJis e 0% : | my heart has always been—on the side | the opinion of ‘the committer, = were but = to ' coevals und contemporarids | Smith of Greeneville, who we hope An- | Vank cceuvied center. the Chelsea | "ofy iy with no Jittle pletsure that we | charged. We shall ever be pleised tc of the nobfest cause that euse mafs|neaoey, bnifloga jor the tillding SEES ‘over the way,' deliberately comuenc nds speedily 1o ocens It an - ram | e Horth, and the Norwich the south | yre enabled to-announce to the gooa ¢ of his prosperity and good for FIRST GUN OF CIVIL WAR. | sword leap from scabbard. 'Hundreds | posed (0 Lo erectéd. “The tirat wux tha ed coming down vesterday morning. | " Vi Dads s a fy end of the building " | people of Norwleh the fact that we are | tune. | [ o whis-bodied men o R e T TR o0 e e Place-meat. and traveling off. In cure] Iy Tesidence; e we may add - | to have a public hall. Ex-Mayor Breed | “Mr. Perry, the other partner, has | Call for Troops Promptly Answered— | who know it is their duty to ge with | be put up there--one perhaps a huni- = 413 Vaigon-1oad inslaliments, 1o o | (at of the beautifal 1o by many chn- | Uiuminating gas had been introduced, | 1 th man. Nho b Abow th confor: 88 | also had xiiriench of otk u pless Editor Bromley's Good-Bye! | the brave fellows who today are flock- | dred feei square. To’ buiid there on other part of the town, to us unknown. | sidercd th abie building | and all -the streets i the city were | desirable 2 boon upon the ci The lures and profits of newspapér phblish- — ing to the standard of the loyal and | the line proposed would requite some Whe buildings adjoining, on elther | spot in ou n Sachem street. | lighted, in which the gas pipés’ had | site fixed upon is the vacant 10t on the | ing. Though too.modest to affix hi: When the news of the fall of Fort true. With them, it will be a sinale | excavation of earth and rock hand, will soon ‘follow in the footsteps | overinoki $0ld hy Louis | been Iaid. But the city watch who had | corger ~of M ADril 14, 1861, tae penple | twinge of conscience, = perhapsy and | The second lof proposed was the site e streets com- | §treets. Tn addition:to covering the|a comsiderable of Norwich responded with immediate | then forgetfuiness of duty. | am serry | of the old Merchants hotcl. A build- and hearty zeal. Within three months | they are not with us—sorry for their | ing three storick high could be put up L twelve commissioned officers iand one | sakes—sorry for ours. But epough has | there. P hundred and thirty-five enlistéd men been sald in these cglupnl"upvn this (Continued on_Page Seventean) Y v P of their illustrious predecessor, and | Mitchell to Wi, P. Greene, or Falls | charge of ime he printed and Bhus leave the coast clear for pick and | Cr.: these changes, when improved. | plained that “he was between tio fires, | whole of this lot, it is to include one- | published, a paper called the ‘Bene- to find a deep and firm founda- l wili grtatly change the aspect .of ‘thc | the gas eompany claiming on the one | half the brick block which bounds the | factor’ which had a large and lucrative whereon to rear a superstructure Plain,’ and add much to the social life ' hand that hie had no right to light up' lot on the east. The size of the hail ' circulation. hting | | n and Washington | imprint to the sheet, we know that for | Sumter cam ) £