Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB
[graphic]

GREATEST OFFER EVER

A Complete Religious Reference Library at the Lowest Price Ever Known.

We have sold 15,000 of these great Bible-study books within four months to happy, grateful and fully satisfied purchasers.

6

CHOICE OF TWO PLANS

AS GIVEN BELOW.

How to get the six books all sent at once. Choice of two plans.

1. Send $6.00, and we will forward the eix books at once, securely boxed, and guarantee safe delivery, you paying freight or express charges.

2.

Send $1.00 and promise, in your letter, to pay $1.00 a month for six months, making 87 00 as complete payment, and we will forward the six books at once, securely boxed, you paying freight or express charges.

We will take back any or all books that are not satisfactory in ten days after examination, and will return money, deducting only the return freight or express charges. This marvelous offer is limited to 1,000 sets, and money will be returned if the books are exhausted and we cannot fill your order.

As to our reliability, we refer to The Connecticut Magazine, or to any commercial agency.
Etablished 1866.

Publishers.

HARTFORD,
CONN.

[graphic][merged small][subsumed][merged small]
[blocks in formation]

"In this place there is but one Church, or in other words but one steeple-but there are Grist and Saw Mills, and a handsome Cascade over the Tumbling dams.”— Washington's Diary, October 17, 1789.

[ocr errors]

NE hundred and fifty years earlier,another traveller, a pioneer in the wilderness, had noticed the picturesque cascade, and his keen eye had marked its utility,

with the result that, a year later, in March, 1640, the Second General Court of Milford agreed with the first William Fowler "that he should build a mill and have her running by thelast of September ;" and further that if the town thought proper, it should take the building off the miller's hands at a valuation of £180. To encourage him, he was given thirty acres of land or Mill Lot" in Eastfield,* rate free during his life and also the " perpetual use of the stream." This mill, the first in New

*See map.

66

Haven Colony, was duly completed. It was a grist mill, but soon there was added to it a saw-mill. So valued was this property, that after a freshet in 1645, the town empowered its owner to go through the village and to call upon each man for one day's labor in repairing damages, and to do this whenever such help was necessary. The town fixed the miller's rates at three quarts out of each bushel of grain.

For over two centuries and a half the water turned the mill-wheels of successive generations as each William Fowler in turn to the ninth generation of him who first chained the stream, measured the grist or told the tale. Stage-coach gave way to railway while the old mill still held its own. Each building became in time the "old mill" until the fifth and last, built about 1884 and closed some ten

The small old building next the new mill is a part of the plant, dating from 1845, when a great freshet swept away both grist and saw mill.

« AnteriorContinuar »