The Celebration of the Two Hundred And Fiftieth Anniversary of the Incorporation

Cover The Celebration of the Two Hundred And Fiftieth Anniversary of the Incorporation
The Celebration of the Two Hundred And Fiftieth Anniversary of the Incorporation
Ipswich Mass
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West Newbury.
REMARKS OF MAJOR BEN: PERLEY POORE OF WEST NEWBURY.
Mr. President, — Is there a society with a long name here at Ipswich, whose protection I can claim against the cruelty of calling upon me — a reporter, and not a speaker — to address this brilliant audience ? I find, too, upon refer- ence to the programme, that I am one of two respondents to this toast, — a pilot balloon, as it were, sent off in advance of the larger and imposing one which is to follow. It was per- haps well, how
...ever, that a resident of Old Newbury should be selected to respond to the toast of " Our Guests ; " for during the past two centuries and a half the men, w^omen, and chil- dren of Old Newbury have often been welcomed here. A convenient resting-place, in the old days of horse-power, for those who journeyed between Newbury and Salem, Ipswich was noted for the hospitality of her citizens and the reasona- ble charges of her tavern-keepers. "Why, Mr. President, the men of Newbury have drunk enough punch and flip here in Ipswich to fill the channel beneath Choate's Stone Bridge ; and I doubt whether there was a headache in the whole of it.

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