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WIGET RESSAGE.
THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY,
——.—— INCORPORATED —_____
21,000 OFFICES IN AMERICA. CABLE SERVICE TO ALL THE WORLD.
This Company TRANSMITS and DELIVERS messages only on conditions limiting its liability, which have be
i en assented to by the sender of the following message.
Errors can be guarded against only by repeating a.message back to the sending station for comparison, and the Company will not h
in transmission or delivery of Unrepeated Night Me«sages, sent at reduced rates. beyond
old itself liable for errors or delays
a sum equal to ten times the amount p
case when the claim isnos presented in writing within thirty days after the message is filed with the Company for transmission.
This isan UNREPEATED NIGHT MESSAGE, and is delivered by request of the sender. under the conditions named above.
THOS. T. ECKERT, President and General Manager. { 1
SUMBER | SENT BY | REC'D BY .
Fa | Ef 19Pd Nite 3 EX
aid for transmission ; nor in any
CTIECK
RECEIVED: >
Washington 2 C A
Qated.
Mr Walter Deane;
Lor
(ye . : i ee ee ee
29 Brewster -
Fifty nine tomorrow we wish you a happy happy day
and hany more
years of usefulness.
Walter Dean Rebe
“Mr and Mrs J N Rose
|STRANGE FREAKS OF BOSTON’S
SPRING AS SHOWN UP BY CHART
CHART SHOWING'THE GREAT VARIATIONS OF TEMPERATURE IN BOSTON DURING THE PAST TWO MONTHS
The Solid Lines Show the Normal Rise of Temperature from April 1 to May 31, the Broken Lines. the Actu
al Variations,
SECU Ee SESRERERRERE
ERUSNAASSECR CREE CER Ee
SSCSECOLOI SoReal
BRCCCCLe
POC
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La tel
Hit
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BSREEe STORER
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SEeRaee,,
poaelerreer LT TT TTT et TT 2
SRE ee 3
Upset April and May by Record Series
of Athletic Stunts in the Glass.
That Boston really had “freak spring
weather” is shown by a chart based|on
official figures. It shows the excessive
Jumps from héat to cold and vice versa
to which Boston has been subjected for
the past two months.
The figures ito the left of the chart in-
dicate the degrees of temperature, Those
at the-top are the days of the months of
April and May. The dotted lines show
the wanderings of the mercury of’ the
past two months of this year, while the
solid lines show the normal temperatures
of the same months during the last 30
‘lance at the chart will show that
April and May of 1907 jhaye been far
from normal in so far as temperature
is concerned. With 32, or freezing point,
vregistered\ on the 7th of April as its
lowest, up to 72 as its highest on the
18th of; May, the mereury, has jogged
up and down unceasingly, sometimes
jumping as far as 16 deg, in the course
of 24 hours,
On most of the days in April and May
the temperature is marked below the
normal line, there being only 13 days out
of a total of 61 in which warmer weath-
er than is usually expected has been re-
corded. During both months thera was
@ dearth of sunshine, northerly and
easterly winds have prevailed and, for
this season of the year, the weather
generally has proved most disagreeable
and unsatisfactory,
In May there wete only seven clear
days, and even on those days the tem-
perature was low, with much humidity
in the air,
The rainfall throughout New England
has, oy the whole, been light, with the
exception of the lith of May, when
nearly an inch fell. Otherwise, rain has |
come in small, well-distributed showers.
Although there have been colder
springs—that of 1882 and 1884, for
example—this year’s has proved un-
usually unpleasant. When it has
turned the least bit warm, it has
rained, and when it has not been rain-
ing it has been too chilly for comfort.
Says in May,’76, Glass Stood
15 Days Between 90 and 104
To the Editor of the Herald:
Speaking of the remarkable coolness
of May, 1907, I desire to draw the
marked contrast with the May of 1876,
when the glass ranged from % deg. to
104 deg. in the shade for, 15 consecutive
days—the lbth to the 30th—the hottest
May known in the country.
Livestock suffered very severely, dying
by hundreds, and rivers and streams
were so low that water had to be
brought on trains to use for w atering
stock, “VERA.*
1577 Washington Street,
Boston, May 31, 1907,
Bolin Kerold f~ 1/90"
Fe toh
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FROM THE
ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY
COU
NEW ENGLAND
By the Reverend & Learned Cotton Mather, D. D., F. R. 8.
The Memorable Action at Wells.
A vessel, the name whereof I know not (reader let it be the Charity) being
immediately dispatched unto Sagadehock by the charitable compassions of the
more southward neighbors, with effects to accomplish it, happily effected the
redemption of many that were taken captives at York, Butthe rest of the people
in that broken town talking of drawing off the Government sent Capt. Converse
and Capt. Greenleaf, with such encouragements unto them to keep their station,
as prevailed with ’em still to stand their ground. In February Major Hutchinson
was made Commander in Chief, and forces under the command of Capt. Converse,
Capt. Floyd, and Capt. Thaxter, were by him so prudently posted on the frontiers,
that by maintaining a continual communication, it became a difficult thing for the
enemy to make any more approaches. Lieutenant Wilson particularly hearing of
a man shot at in the Quocheco woods, went out with a scout of about eighteen
men, who came upon the indians that had shot at the man, and killed and wounded
all but one of the whole company. But now, reader, the longest day the year
is to come on, if I mistake not, the bravest act in the war fell out upon it.
Modockawando is now come, according to his promise a twelve-month ago.
Capt. Converse was lodg’d in Storer’s garrison at Wells with but fifteen men; and
there came into Wells two sloops, with a shallop, which had aboard supplies of
ammunition for the soldiers, and contribution for the needy. The cattel this day
came frighted, and bleeding.out of the woods, which was a more certain omen of
indians a coming than all the prodigies that livy reports of the sacrificed oxen.
Converse immediately issued out his commands unto all quarters, but especially
to the sloops just then arrived.’ The sloops were commanded by Samuel Storer,
and James Gouge, and Gouge’s being two miles up the river, he wisely brought
her down undiscovered unto Storer’s, by the advantage of a mist then prevailing.
A careful night they had on’t. The next morning before daylight, one John
Diamond, a stranger that came in the shallop on a visit, came to Capt. Converse’s
garrison, where the watch invited him in, but he chose rather to go aboard the
sloops, which were little more than a gun-shot off; and, alas, the enemy issuing
from their lurking-places, immediately seiz’d him, and haled him away by the
hair of the head, (in spite of all the attempts used by the garrison to recover him)
for an horrible story to be told by and by concerning him. The general of the
enemies’ army was Monsieur Burniff; and one Monsieur Labrocree was a principal
commander; (the enemy said, he was Lieutenant General:) there were also divers
other Frenchmen of quality, accompanied with Modockawando, and Moxus, and
Egeremet, and Warumbo, and several more Indian Sagamores; the army made up
in all about five hundred men, ov fierce things in the shape of men, all to encounter
fifteen men in one little garrison, and about fifteen more men, (worthily called
such) in a couple of open sloops.
Diamond having informed ’em how ’twas in all points, (only that for fifteen, by
a mistake he said thirty,) they fell to dividing the persons and plunder, and
agreeing that such an English captain should be slave to such a one, and such a gen-
tleman in the town should serve such a.one, and his wife be maid of honor to such or
such a Squaw proposed, and Mr. Wheelright (instead of being a worthy counsellor
of the province, which he now is!) was to be the servant of such a Netop; and the
sloops, with their stores, to be so and so parted among them. There wanted but
one thing to consummate the whole matter, even the chief thing of all, which I
suppose they had not thought of; that was, for heaven to deliver all this prize
into their hands; but aliter statutum est in coclo! A man habited like a gentle-
man made a speech to them in English, exhorting ’em to courage, and assuring
’em, that if they would courageously fall upon the English, all was their own.
The speech being ended, they fell to the wor , and with an horrid shout and shot,
made their assault pon the feeble garrison; but the English answered with a
brisk volley, and sent such a leaden shower among them, that they retired from
the garrison to spend the storm of their fury upon the sloops.
You must know that Wells harbor is rather a creek than a river for ’tis very
narrow, and at low tide in many places dry; nevertheless, where the vessels ride
it is deep enough, and so far off the bank, that there is from thence no leaping
aboard. But our sloops were sorely incommoded by a turn of the creek, where
the enemy could iye out of danger so near ’em as to throw mud aboard with their
hands. The enemy was also priviledged with a great heap of plank lying on the
bank, and with an hay stock, which they strengthened with the posts and rails;
and from all these places, they poured in their vengenance upon the poor sloops,
while they so placed smaller parties of their salvages, as to make it impossible
for any of the garrison to afford *em any relief. Lying thus within a dozen
yards of the sloops, they did with their fire arrows, divers times desperately set
the sloops on fire: but the brave defendants, with a swab at the end of a rope
tied unto a pole, and so dipt into the water, happily put the fire out. In brief,
the sloops gave the enemy so brave a repulse, that at night they retreated; and
when they renewed their assault, finding that their fortitude would notassure the
success of the assault unto them, they had recourse unto their policy. First, an
indian comes on with a slab for a shield before him; when a shot from one of the
sloops pierced the slab, which fell down instead of a tombstone with the dead
Indian under it: on which, as little a fellow as he was, I know not whether some
will not reckon it proper to inscribe the epitaph which the Italians used to bestow
upon their dead Popes: When the dog is dead, all his malice is dead with him.
Their next stratagem was this: They brought out of the woods a kind of a cart,
which they trimm’d and rigg’d, and fitted up into a thing that might be ealled, a
chariot: whereupon they built a platform, shot-proof in the front, and placed
many men upon the platform. Such an engine they understood how to shape,
without having read (I suppose) the description of the Pluteus in Vegetius! This
chariot they push’d on towards the sloops, till they were got, it may be, within
fifteen yards of them; when lo one of their wheels, to their admiration, sunk into
the ground. A Frenchman stepping to heave the wheel with an helpful shoulder,
Storer shot him down; another stepping to the wheel, Storer with a well-placed
shot, sent him after his mate: so the rest thought it was best to let it stand as it
was. The enemy kept gauling the sloop from their several batteries, and calling
em to surrender, with many fine promises to make them happy, which ours
answered with a just laughter, that had now and then a mortiferous bullet at the
end of it. The tide rising, the chariot overset, so that the men behind it lay open
to the sloops, which immediately dispenced an horrible slaughter among them;
and they that could get away, got as fast, and as far off as they could. In the
night the enemy had much discourse with the sloops: they enquired, who were
their commanders? and the English gave an answer, which in some other cases
and places would have been too true, that they had a great many commanders:
but the Indians replied you lie, you have none but Converse, and we will have
him too before morning! They also knowing that the magazine was in the
garrison, lay under an hill-side, pelting at that by times, but Captain Converse
once in the night, sent out three or four of his men into a field of wheat for a
shot, if they could get one. There seeing a black heap lying together, ours all at
once let fly upon them a shot, that slew several of them that were thus caught in
the corn, and made the rest glad that they found themselves able to run for it.
Capt. Converse was this while in much distress about a scout of six men which he
had sent forth to Newichawannick the morning before the arrival of the enemy,
ordering them to return the day following. The scout return’d in the very
mouth of the enemy that lay before the garrison; but the corporal having his
wits about him, call’d out aloud, (as if he had seen Capt. Converse making a sally
forth upon ’em) Captain, wheel about your men round the hill, and we shall catch
*em; there are but a few rogues of ’em! Upon which the Indians imagining that
Capt. Converse had been at their heels, betook themselves to their heels; and our
folks got safe into another garrison. On the Lord’s day morning there was for a
while a deep silence among the assailants; but at length getting into a body, they
marched with great formality towards the garrison, where the captain ordered
his hand-ful of men to lye snug and not make a shot, until every shot might be
likely to do some execution. While they thus beheld a formidable crew of
dragons, coming with open mouth upon them to swallow them up at a mouthful,
one of the soldiers began to speak of surrendering: upon which the Captain
vehemently protested, that he would lay the man dead who should so much as
mutter that base word any more! and so they heard no more onit: but the
valiant Storer was put upon a like protestation, to keep ’em in good fighting trim
aboard the sloops also. The enemy now approaching very near, gave three
shouts that made the earth ring again; and crying out in English, fire, and fall on
brave boys! the whole body drawn into three ranks, fired at once. Captain
Converse immediately ran into the several flankers, and made their best guns fire
at such a rate, that several of the enemy fell, and the rest of ’em disappeared
almost as nimbly as if there had been so many spectres: particularly a parcel of
them got into asmall deserted house: which having but a board-wall to it, the
Captain sent in after them those bullets of twelve to the pound, that made the
house too hot for them that could get out of it. The women inthe garrison upon
this occasion took up the Amazonian stroke, and not only brought ammunition to
the men, but also with a manly resolution fired several times upon the enemy.
The enemy finding that things would not yet go to their minds at the garrison,
drew off to try their skill upon the sloops, which lay still abreast in the creek,
lash’d fast one to another. They built a great fire-work about eighteen or
twenty foot square, and fill’d it up with combustible matter, which they fired;
and then set it in the way for the tide now to float it up unto the sloops, which had
now nothing but an horrible death before them. Nevertheless their demands of
both the garrison and the sloops to yield themselves, were answered no other
wise than with death upon many of them, spit from the guns of the besieged.
Having tow’d their fire-work as far as they durst, they committed it unto the
tide; but the distressed Christians that ha: this deadly fire swimming along upon
the water towards them, committed it unto God: and God looked from heaven
upon them in this prodigious article of their distress. These poor men cried, and
the Lord heard them, and saved them out of their troubles; The wind, unto their
astonishment, immediately turn’d about, and with a fresh gale drove the machin
ashore on the other side, and split it so, that the water being let upon it, the fire
went out. So the Godly men that saw God from heaven thus fighting for them,
eried out with an astonishing joy, if it had not been the Lord, who was on our
side, they had swallowed us up quick: blessed be the Lord who has not given us
as a prey to their teeth: our soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the
fowlers! The enemy were now in a pitiful pickle with toiling and moiling in the
mud, and black’ned with it, if mud could add blackness to such miscreants; and
their ammunition was pretty well exhausted: so that now they began to draw
off in all parts, and with rafts get over the river: some whereof breaking, there
did not a few cool their late heat, by falling into it. But first they made all the
spoil they could upon the cattle about the town: and giving one shot more at the
sloops, they killed the only man of ours that was killed aboard ’em. Then after
about half an hour’s consultation, they sent a flag of truce to the garrison,
advising ’em with much flattery to surrender; but the captaid sent ’em word,
that he wanted for nothing but for men to come and fight him. The Indians
replied unto Captain Converse being you are so stout, why don’t you come and
fight in the open field like a man, and not fight in a garrison like asquaw? The
captain rejoined, what a fool are you? do you think thirty men a match for five
hundred? No (says the captain, counting, as well as he might, each of his fifteen
men to be as good as two!) Come with your thirty men upon the plain and I
will meet you with my thirty as soon as you will. Upon this the Indian answered,
nay, we own English fashion is all one fool, you kill me, me kill you! no, better
lye somewhere and shoot a man, and he no see! that the best soldier. Then they
fell to coaksing the captain with so many fine words as the Fox in the fable had
for the allurement of his prey unto him and urged mightily, that ensign Hill,
who stood with the flag of truce, might stand a little nearer to their army. The
captain for a good reason to be presently discerned, could not allow that: where-
upon they fell to threatening and raging, like so many defeated devils, using these
words, damn ye, we’ll cut you as small as tobacco before tomorrow morning.
The captain bid ’em to make haste, for he wanted work; so the Indian throwing
‘his flag on the ground, ran away, and ensign Hill nimbly stripping his flag, ran
into the valley, near the place where they had urged for a parley.
And now for poor John Diamond! the enemy retreating (which opportunity
‘the sloops took to burn down the dangerous hay-stock) into the plain, out of gun-
‘shot they fell to torturing their ‘captive John Diamond after a manner very
diabolical. ‘They stripped him, they scalped him alive, and after , they
finished that article in the punishment of traitors upon him; they slit him with
knives between his fingers ; they made cruel gashes in the most fleshy parts
of his body, and stuck the gashes with firebrands which were afterwards found
sticking in the wounds. ‘They thus butchered one poor Englishman with all the
fury that they would have spent upon them all; and performing an exploit for
five hundred furies to brag of at their coming home. Ghastly to express! what
was it then to suffer? They returned then unto the garrison, and kept firing at
it now and then till near ten a clock at night; when they all marched off, leaving
behind ’em some of their dead: Whereof one was Monsieur Labrocree, who had
about his neck a pouch with about a dozen reliques ingeniously made up, and a
printed paper of indulgences, and several other implements; and no doubt thought
himself as good safety as if he had all the spells of Lapland about him: but it
seems none of the amulets about his neck would save him from a mortal shot in
the head. Thus in forty-eight hours was finished an action as worthy as to be
related, as perhaps any that oceurs in our story. And it was not long before the
valiant Gouge, who bore this part in this action, did another that was not much
inferior to it, when he suddenly recovered from the French a valuable prey, which
they had newly taken upon our coast.
I doubt, reader, we have had this article of our history a little too long.—We
will finish it, when we have remark’d, that albeit there were too much feebleness
discovered by my countrymen in some of their actions during this war at sea, as
well as on shore, yet several of their actions, especially at sea, deserves to be
remembered. And I cannot but particularly bespeak a remembrance for the
exploit performed by some of my neighbors in a vessel going into Barbadoes.
They were in sight of Barbadoes assaulted by a French vessel, which had a good
number of guns, and between sixty and seventy hands. Our vessel had four
guns, and eight fighting men, (truly such!) with two tawny servants. The names
of these men were Barret, Saunderland, Knoles, Nash, Morgan, Fosdyke, and
two more that I now forget. A desperate engagement ensued wherein our eight
mariners managed the matter with such bravery, that by the help of heaven they
killed between thirty and forty of the French assailants, without losing one of
their own little number: And they sank the French vessel which lay by their
side, out of which they took twenty-seven prisoners, whereof some were wounded,
and all crying for quarter. In the fight the French pennant, being by the wind
fastened about the top-mast of the English vessel, it was torn off by the sinking
of the French vessel, and left pleasantly flying there. So they sailed into Bar-
badoes, where the assembly voted them one publick acknowledgment of their
courage and conduct in this brave action, and our history now gives them another.
*Col. Storer, the present possessor, kept up the stockadoes, and one or more of the
flank arts until since the year 1760, rather as a memorial than necessary defence.
History of Massachusetts, by Thomas Hutchinson,
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Dated November 1, 1919. Due November 1, 1954.
Interest payable May 1 and November 1.
Denominations: Coupon, $100, $500, $1,000.
Principal and interest payable in U. S. Gold without deduction for any French taxes, present or future.
Each issue is the direct obligation of the city issuing the same, and will be the only
external loan of these cities presently outstanding. The finances of these cities are under
the control and supervision of the French National Government. The cities are, next to
Paris, among the largest and most important trade centres in France, and their credit is
established upon a sound basis. All are situated far from the zone of recent hostilities and
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At a price to yield 4.75 per cent.
CITY OF NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS
4%, PER CENT. COUPON BONDS
Exempt from all Federal Income Taxes.
Exempt from taxation in Massachusetts.
$15,000 Due December 1, 1920 $15,000 Due December 1, 1922
$15,000 Due December 1, 1921 $15,000 Due December 1, 1923
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