Evening post annual ..: biographical sketches (with portraits) of the state officers, representatives in Congress, governor's staff, and senators and members of the General Assembly of the state of Connecticut . ition. He has been its secretary and actingschool visitor. Mr. Clapp has filled otheroffices in that town such as Selectman, a mem-ber of the Board of Relief, and Assessor, whichlast office he now holds. He believes in pro-gressive farming and is therefore a member ofLittle River Grange, No. 36, of which he hasbeen secretary and master. In the fall of 1890,he was chosen to represent th


Evening post annual ..: biographical sketches (with portraits) of the state officers, representatives in Congress, governor's staff, and senators and members of the General Assembly of the state of Connecticut . ition. He has been its secretary and actingschool visitor. Mr. Clapp has filled otheroffices in that town such as Selectman, a mem-ber of the Board of Relief, and Assessor, whichlast office he now holds. He believes in pro-gressive farming and is therefore a member ofLittle River Grange, No. 36, of which he hasbeen secretary and master. In the fall of 1890,he was chosen to represent the town of Hamp-ton in the General Assembly. He is a strongRepublican. CASSIUS S. CHASE, ()f Killingly, is a woolen manufacturer at Kil-lingly, and a member of the firm of C. D. &C. S. Chase. He was formerly in the grocerybusiness at Mechanicsville, Conn. He is aRepublican, and a native of Killingly. JAMES N. TUCKER, Of Killingly, is a native of the town he repre-sents. He is a farmer, and was a member ofthe House in 1882, being on the committee onCities and Boroughs. Mr. Tucker is an ardentRepublican and a member of the town com-mittee, besides having held in the past a num-ber of local offices. L2i). l« IHN VDDISi >\ Pi »R I : ()f Pomfi et, eldest son ol P |ohn Addi son I ii .ui i ij the Sheffield S School t New Haven, and Josephine 1 uSheffield, a daughter of the foundei ol that in-ition, was born in New Haven on the 17thol April, 1 8 I was educated at thi 11 kins < irammar £ f New Haven and Vale m w hihio, l>m aft left that prol t. ? ent 1 1 ? Hi nalism, Ipapei expei I ten _\ ear i, hi ha ; ia< m ith ill New Haven Palladium, HartfordCourant, New ? « 17 Tribune . and h ading magazines, including th< \lander and th< ?written and printed several mI notable of which? ?uid a deland admini: ti iiu inn hundredwhich ha ?In ? 130 while there conducted a general book publish-ing business, under the title of the ArlingtonPublishing Company. For one session ofCongr


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectconnect, bookyear1892