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&Sorwich ulletin nud Guufice. _ Entered at tne Postoliice a Cona. as second-clase mat t Nerwich, tor, Telephone Caliat Bulletin Businees Offi e, Bulletin Bdit 1 R 8- Bulietla Job Office ot *T T Hilmantic Office, Reom 3 Marray Bullding. Telephone 810. w Norwich, Saturday, May 18, 1912, CONGRESSMAN HIGGINS VINDI- CATED. Entitled to his seat by a slightly Representative W. Higgins the oid Third district. This declar tion even after a year and a half n congress and increased majority, is of in contest, is the one expec was nothing ‘but the dream o bilities to substantiate Ty recount £s and i A doing would have been n ) have thrown proper nd ¢ bo. ed original count v the declared | result. | One of the est factors in se- | curing the r was the fac | essm gness to agree t 1 and of e have e r on is all up and abh en thoug at wa ntested d he had agreed to a f bal s \ avenue wh ), slip not lay and awa as a man's + has he contrary | standard | 81 ernment ings, obtained soil surveys for Windham and New London count d » the fact that nd for try is greater than the money able and opriated. He is ever cc n o interests of the old and, in particular, all meass b n vital te his RAILROADS AND STEAMBOATS. proposed leg on which would the steambe nes from the | i have ularly | t in New England, jone by water in comnection with the | railroads. The that is being | made nly na egislation | med at the lines own iich may or erate throug migh to he Panama canal, but as it is drawn s applica ailroad-owned amboat whether they make canal or he opposit which seems just is from the New England lines which do strictly coast- busin They do not intend to erate through the canal and it is kely that an amendment will be h road-owned railroads ¢ ald not mean a mpanic onnections continual in t and no > cen Not intend- Ing to operate in the canal the leg lation which is proposed to affect t ted the prop: s of the nal trade that the legislation passes. THE TUBERCULOSIS FIGHT. The N treatment of tuberculosis has become a world-wide proposition. 1n m iniries a y ed effort and It 18 conceded 1o be the prop w sanatoria have not always 2 filled expectatioms, it is becanse early when | and and avi s y i o iwn of the law which had neve 1 been closed, Miss Quisniy, the Amerieas gind who drove an asroplens ascross the English chenned. mads $6A04 in fwo weeke, She was well paid foy her Tl Asdinds, | lion | stones | from which we get the most of these THE DANDELION PEST. The wild carrot and the dandelions are pests which sheuld be exterminat- ed, In the ecase of the former, deter- mined efforts have been made to such | an extent that a state law was passed concerning it, but there are localities where it grows as thick as elover. 'This exists in the ceuntry distriets, if at all, but in the eity the dandelion Is equally as bad. Both are pretty in the flower but they raise havee with the fields and the lawns. All agree that the dandelion should be suppressed, but the question is how to do it. The dandellon is by ne means slaugh- tered by the ‘“greens” diggers. They get away with a good many of them, and they make pretty good eating, but in every sectfon they are running riot and soon will be going to seed by the thousands to appear next year and continue to crowd out the grass. Out A great per cent. of mankind cannot get anything in this world unless they dig up the meney to put down in ex- change fer it. This is not because the world is any harder upen them than it is upon those whe have credit. These twe classes use themselves dif- ferently. One class gratifies its wants at wgitever cost to itself; the ether class§denies itself much that it may haveta surplus. Credit is based on character and upon possessions—it is created by work and econemy, er by luck and a good inheritance. he man who has anything to exchange for money seeks the favor of the man who has money, while the man who has no money is always seeking in- dulgence of the man who has it. How true the old proverb is: “To him who in Sedalia, Mo, the Daughters of the |hath shall be given; from him who Ame 1 Revolution took up the cud- fl::{:,,nu‘th:hfl gieto(r!k::dlh.:;n ewhi.chl:’r}n; gel against the dandelion, which re- P takes everything but his pelt. It takes ability to be in the preferred class, 0 and it takes self-sacrifice and co- blossoms had gone to seed. Prizes | operatiog. You can get there if you offered to the school children and | will. D not think the world is against hools as a whole for dandelions | You, for you are simply against your- in with roots attached, and so | Seif. rivalry that school | day to reap the ben- | the contest. It was a healthful | nd the dandelion was ousted, en might not use good judgment | 1 Jawn studded with the | but method is | sulted in the destruction of thousands of pounds of greens and before the A bright boy is not always such a blessing to the world as his juvenile accomplishments indicate, or as bad as his frequently revealed deviltry ap- pears to foreshadow. A greal many men who are in prison were bright and not a few who gave no sign of aptitude in youth have become judges and governors of states. Do not repine because the boy is not as | smart as your neighbor’s boys—do not ow the successfu IMPbRTS 6Fv LIJXURIES. If everyone was to be a judge of xalt yourself because he always wins what luxuries are, opinions would va- [Out in every competition he enters. * Seodiiy b bureau of statistics | D0 YOu know he is honest, temperate, ke \ds axt work, laces and | industrious and tactful—whéther he is s P | to be a son of thrift or a victim of embroideries, champagne and other | eyviravagance or vice. A life of emi- tobacco and manufactures | nence or distinctipn is not nearly as ostrich feathers, artificial | pleasurable as it seems. It is great to toys, perfumeries and cosmet- manufa s of gold and be accomplished, but it is nauseating to be forever flattered. It is satisfying jewelry 1 ; to do things which make the world other articles of that g the - in Tts list in renoriing | center its gaze upon you; it is dis- ; v in lis Ust in TEPOIrUing | trogsing to be impoverished by admir- mports of luxuries for 1912 | erg who have to be entertained. Those of these articles, especial who court goodness and the happiness important ones, the imports | which comes of it are the ones who I year of 1912 will exc zet most out of life. of any earlier year. Arl {a 30 million for | .| have never found that the snake in T e Al arte s i he grass is worse than any other the full year, & total exceeding by 50 | snake, As a figure of speech founded per cent. the highest record of any |on ignorance and prejudice it misrep- earlier year, The total of 44 million | resents the snake in the grass, if it was also spent abroad for laces and | doesn’t the human to whom it is ap- embroideries, those made from cotton | Plied. Most everyone is afraid of 1 ove arters of ;,h,‘.\x;}\)l;ei‘:fwu%ghmey are {w:;lslvelln S el | | @ppearance. ere are only two ven- Wholnpaius af e p. The diamond | ooyg gnakes in New England—the tation does not show such a big | | rattlesnake and the red snake or cop- but perhead. The snake in the grass de- stroys a great many injurious insects and is really a help to the grasslands. Snakes do kill birds and capture and destroy rats and mice, and are recog- nized as of such use that they are pre- ferred to cats in cellars in some parts of the country because of their de- pendence as destroyers of rodents, liz- ards, waterbugs and cockroaches. The in, reach about not touch 1910, however, when 48 mil- | the full year the value 41 m This does | ion. dollars' worth of the precious re brought inte this country, when the value exceeded 42 r 1907, mi Europe is the ection of the world luxuries, France contributing nearly | imaginary snakes are the worst enemy half of the works and the United | °f man, and there is not a good one Kingdom about a quarter, with Ger- [ 2MOng them. But, of course, snakes many only about & million doliare | ¥ill.never be.in public favor, for the = i o iy i “°" |snake in the Garden of Fden talked worth, Switzerland supplied about one | too much. Snakes talk no more. third of t laces and embroideries, | — while ,”" cat diamonds. came from | There are lots of intelligent people the African mines through’ European | who do not believe in the force of markets. Nine-tenths of the cham-|thought—that a mind negative to the | pagne imports were from France. The | interests of the individual is an ab- | total rtation of luxuries for the q{»l\a(e check to success. There are men ending With next montn | ¥hO think there is no chance in life for them—there are parents who mur- | mur the sentiment in their homes, not realiizing what a fault and deception EDITORIAL NOTES. it is. About the only person who has The bandits and the record-breaking | N0 chance in this world is the laggard; e GiEle Faris & hot oldl and he has no chance because he has d | no energy. What are the free chances |in this country? Free schools, free - | libraries and free night schools, free The workmen on the Stony breok | courses of lectures and free classes in rvoir are not complaining becauss | thousands of cities, and still the boys e water there. with brains and tact—who make the g it great merchants and bankers and thought for today: If the ‘:‘t‘:lé:(zcx(l, arehstlll l;‘alng flrswnffrom Lot st < ot ntry where chances are fewer. B o 1o £004 1t 38 Ty think there s no chance in lifs piant that is at fanlt is to decree for one's self a life of SR 5 servitude and meager subsistence—it band for the democratic con- |is a gurrender to the emomy in the at Baltimore is pra.('\lf‘lng‘facp of a thousand fighting chances, 2 Me Around Again, Willie” |There is a chance fn life for every 200 millions. 8 is so Happy 1barb not the human soul. is not popular now to be knnwn‘ e e t who would not harm a| Some men get an idea and then they s is the “Swat the fly!” era. | close tight the door of their mind and | sit down with it alone. They do net Alienists in Richeson’s case have | @PPear to know that ideas were not eved the people of a great anxieiy | 51Ven to men for their sole use, Those | gained cregi; for their profes. |0 Ret most from great ideas are the T o thinkers who share them with thelr | fellow men. 1t is through ideas that ¢ e | the power of man is made visible, It With Harry Thaw promising to prac- | 18 the way In which he makes undenl- ice law if he is reieased from Mai- |able the fact that he i m creator eawan, it's a hard commentary on the | Which 1s one of the most convincing profesiion. evidences that he is a son of God, The current of ideas just expresses the Golng ashore off the Jersey coast, |PI08Tess of man along the highway of L life from generatio 7 Tuna showed that the submaring | and 1t flows trom within outwerd. Moosh is as expert in picking out the shoal|ideas are theorles until through en- spots as the liners. | ergy they are materialized, It was the ideas of Franklin which aided man the d 2 1 o that refor- | was vears a | to make electricity serviceable; and mation in China would mean trans- | the ideas of Bdison which made it pos- formation, and the truth of the pre- | Sible to catch the vibrations of the Michian 8 0% aogerént | volce so that a song in the natural ' - | vuxu: of the singer can be reproduced et | A AT T .| @ thousand years after his body has iven though an investigator says|peen returned to dust, and his voice a millon | gjlenced. The Spirit still leads man in without prove that all all his achievements, and were he more loyal to divine law his progress would T | be still greater, automobile | = out beside his | The way to make a useful man of a o | boy is not to tell him every time he millionaires are truthful new le mind o tthabt | erTs, or disappoints you, that he never will amount to anything. A parent S s favoring | Who realizes the force of words—the ko iz to do with | \BEPITing e s of suggestion—con- ) 5« B o yith | siders such conduct on the part of a parent akin to crime. It is a parental duty to build up ambition in a son—to inspire self-reliance. The home life is { not the place for the sound of discour- the Roosevelt of 1904, 1as not dawned upon the progre. | sives yet that there is a very large | 2ément to be heard; but the place onht he h is enough of the | Where hope and confidence are nur- party left to win at the | 0T and a useful career is fore- shadowed. Ungovernable tempers and careless speech have been the damna- tion of too many boys. Successful men are not made by leading boys by the hand, or supplylng youth with mora meney than the average man can rern, engendering in them false notions and false pride, The Spirft which makes men takes pride in character and achlevement—it takes note of values i3 to express power, The boy not only know you belleve in must be made to believe in expected that the receiving New fortune F York P his xeat to a woman the o any eff 18 so month's acation e retury We all liie the breezy individuals, b : i S ey ?“nw'h" they fust blew inte town or g D d rode in an autemobile: but this is the i friend; but | excoption in life, tor we are tralned {o he is ir wishand,” This | puy strict atiention to tha formalities Hows % woman can change her |4nd to say things which refleet eredit mind, She has applied for a d o our montality, rather than upon Learts, The breezy individual iy in w of haraeier ee-Hréager He takes the chill out foracs by expjressing himself freely, s eancida ehange he ntmosphers in g 5 A few minutes hy teiling you all about . his hame eor his beyhood, or his dear the siile whers he first when Bob White was ¢ meadow; how many ¢ has, and what & nies it his howbies and inte his of you feel glad enty minudes and all and all espress regreis when ie came the heur arrives for parting, We re- Edmund Burke, whes e spoke for | member him for v ave ean't forget “the d of England in the | him: but we fall back inie the old rut i8th « Glie A W for - |and {ry te exist by leaving the heart outenis of Faes and natien | out nl conversation and substituting samething else. thralled by Hew we da stay en- our early training. The tead appears to repeasent hu- weq | no interest 2 WTORE it s ReiF eFiHe, ¢ Wi erigE, Bot theis R (Written Specially fer The Bulletin.) A statement concerning the laber trouble in Lowell came to my notice lately. It was te this effect—that the Strife between eapital and labor there exhibited would show itself for a long time in the work dene there, Let the employers clalm the victory, or let it | be claimed by the working people, whichever side comes out victerious the spirit of unrest and conflict could not: fail, in the opinion of the writer, to manlfest itself in the output of the | mills for a long time to come, There is a degree of truth in this theory, which both contractors and those whom they employ should re- member. The spirit of the workman reflects itself In the work which he does. Mind controls matter in this as | in many other directions. A discon- tented, uneasy, dissatisfied set of op- eratives never did and never will pro- duce as good work as a similar num- ber of cheerful, contented, happy la- borers. Everyone who drives or works with herses knows this truth and applies it in his management of his team. He knows better than to antagonize his team if he expects to get good work from it. Watch two men in their ef- | forts to back a heavy load over a hard grade to the spot where they wish it |to be befere emptying the cart. One orders his horse to back and encour- ages him with a kindly pat and stroke. The load is pretty heavy and the horse | fears he cannot do the work required, but does his best. Another pat and stroke and a kind word, and he is urged again to the task. This time | the man grasps the wheel and helps in | the work. A third effort is required, {but the faithful animal responds to kind treatment, and all is done with | no loud talk or use of whip. Kindness brings a return in patient effort, and | is crowned with success. The other man is equally well equipped so fa as his team is concerned, and his load is no heavier, At the first show of hesitation, down comes the whip with a sharp blow, accompanied with loud, angry words and a volley of profanit: This treatment is repeated till at la the desired point is attained, but a the expenSe of great waste of vitality in both man and beast, the horse drip- ping with sweat and trembling with excitement, the man tired out with his own ill temper and out of sorts with himself and all else. Which is the better way? Why should not the same ployed in our mills and factories? Now and then we hear of a mill vil- lage where the owners house their op- eratives not only decently but with an eye to beautifying the place. Their streets are well laid out, wide, and with abundant shade trees, the lawns and grass-bordered avenues are cared for by the proprietors, and the men are helped and encouraged to become purchagers of their own dwellings. A pleasant park is open to the people, a library and reading room give ample opportunity for social and mental cul- ture, and the people are furnished with rule apply to the men and women em- | 'CHARACTER IN WORK | homes bullt after the same pattern, musical and literary epportunities far» beyond their ability to ebtain other- wise, Needless to say, no “strikes” are heard of there, and the products of these milis are noted far and wide for their first-class quality. The hap- py, contented workmen reflect their happiness and content in their endeav- or to advance the interests of their! employers. They boast with pride of | the work of their looms and refer to the owners of the mills with constantly increasing affection, peinting them out to visitors with evident dellght in the fact that they are recognized as co- workers and not slaves. More than one such village exists in Connecticut, we are giad to say, but we must admit that the majority of mill towns show row after row of painted the same tint of gray or some other dull hue, and evidently done with as little expense as possible. . Set | close to the thoroughfare, no sux- | rounding of green lawn can be obtain- ed, and children wild and unkempt run about the streets, while their slatternly | mothers gossip with each other, calling | from the low steps affording the only | entrance to the comfortless tenement | within. The manufacturers, usually non- residents of the place, throw off res- ponsibility by saying the people care | for nothing better and that to show | any variety of arrangement would | create a feeling of envy and lead to| charges of favoritism. Occasionally, | however, we see an attempt at decora- tion which shows a desire for some- thing better. The bare window with- out blinds is partially screened by | running vines trained up over it, and | in the little space at the side of the house, a few straggling plants are| feebly trying their best to exist under unfavorable conditions. | 1 should like to sce the experiment tried of transplanting such a colony | of operatives to a spot where more | comfortable conditions might fall to their share. 1 believe their work would respond and show improvement. “Such expenditure would eat up all | the profits,” is the reason commonly | advanced by the owners as excuse for | all neglect on their part. Of course, we know they are in the business for profit, not philanthropy, but I am sure they would find reimbursement for the money expended in better quality of the fabric When I hear the mill bell ringing before daylight, as often happens dur- ing the winter months, and think of the sleepy, listiess toilers going to their | required tasks, I no longer wonder at the pallid, pasty complexion of those employed. Sometimes perhaps the sense of brotherhood of man may outstrip the | love of personal gain even in us Americans who are praised at one mo- ment for our generosity and berated immediately afterward for our selfish greed of money-getting. Then, in- deed, the strife between capital and jabor will be lessened, and content will take the place of unrest. May Heaven speed the hour! AN IDLER. mility. This useful little reptile leads a life of industry without making a pretence. He is a good hunter, and the places he selects to intercept his vic- tims shows that he has good judgment. Another evidence of his good judg- ment was shown recently when he bur- rowed deep in the ashes of an extinct bonfire as a comfortable place to keep warm over night. I must confess he put me in mind of the traditional “nig- ger in the woodpile;” and he narrowly escaped the tine of the fork. The only thing which has beauty about a toad s his eyes; and his business is prin- cipally in his tongue. He stroils a half mile or more from water, and if he makes his home inland he strolls to the wet lands at night to meet his mate and to join the chorus, The toad is not as glow as he seems, for, energized by fear, he can hop nearly as fast as a man can walk. He is a good gardener and figures big as a gardener’s friend. SUNDAY MORNING TALK If Dreams Came True! One of the most beautiful of the Old Testament stories tells how the Lord appeared to youthful King Selomon in a dream and asked what gift he most desired. It was a notable test and right nobly the young monarch met it. Turn- ing away from riches, fame, pleasure of other forms of material good, Solo- mon chose an understanding heart. In the presence of his great responsibili- ties he wanted the gift of wisdom. The fulfillment ?“h genzmus as the promise, “‘Beh ave done ac- cordfn( to thy words.” The gift of wisdom came upon Solomon abundant. ly. He became the wiset of the chil- dren of the Hast. To this day his name is a synonym for power of clear dis- cernment. Do you realize that we all go through about the same program in our own lives? There were three parts to Solo- mon's experience;an offer, & choice, the bestowal of the gift desired. And if plain John Smith will examine his ca- reer he is likely to find these three phases measurably duplicated. Life says to everyone who takes it at all seriously, “Ask give thee.” Here are certain treasures offered—take your pick. Different pos- sibilities lie before you, various ca- reers are open, there are many lines of work or study in which you may engage. What do you want of life? What do you desire it to give you. A rich man was once solicited by a friend to contribute toward a certain charity. The applicant received back the words on a slip of paper, “Fill it in for what you want from me.” In some large and general way it seems to me that life makes an offer like that to us all. What do you demand of your earthly experience? What seems to you the supreme good? Solomon had t6 make a choice and everyone has to. Out of the gifts that life has to offer we are each practical- ly forced to a selection. The bent of a personality may sometimes be seen quite early. Aims and ambitions are often apparent look befora school da) what I shall | a blank check signed and dated with | are over. The lad “plays store,” mails { boats on the pond, reads solid books, | and we say, here is a coming merchant or a sea captain or & scholar, girl we say, will be a musician or an artist or a heme-maker. No hours are more fraught with destiny than thoss in which purpeses and ideals are taking shape, For goed or ill hu- man seuls are cheosing every day, Tn eur lives, too, like that of Sela- men, the gift chosen is the gift re- ceived. After discounting all appar ent exceptions 16 the rule I am strong- ly inclined to balieve that life plays fair with the sens of men. There is a gen- eral appropriatensss in the gifts that are bestowed upen us. Think it ever, gentie reader. The one who a life- tims through makes meney his theught | erally secures & comfortable balance in the bank, Cleaving te learning one is at length numbered with the schol- ars, He whe strives through all the vears for health er fun or fame. gen- that dreams are true interpreters of our inclinatiens.” In this glass yeu may pehold the reflection of yeur ideals, yeur aime and yeur lengings. Gaze here upen the mental picture that yeu are all the time making actual, Make the dieam, Wheiher -il-be of | by day ang his dream by’ night gen- | erelly geis his wish, | If dreams came true! The nub of the | | matter is that dreams generally do | ceme true. A dream is neihing but a picture of yeur theught lite. As Mon- taigne says, “Ibelieve it ta be true This | i i | | | | the night or of hours musing high enough. Let it take into account the nobler powers of your spirit. Propose to yourself a career that isn’'t going to cramp and smoth- er the soul at the last. Remember you may be lord of that inner empire that rules all else, for, “As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he.” THE PARSON, of day-time IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN To love is to let yourself be loved. The beginnings of love may be spon- taneous, but the permanent fountain of love is fed by the consciousness that we are beloved. The food of love is love returned. Without response love starves to death, The mother is said to love the child even when he spurns her, and God is declared to love them that scorn Him; vet this feeling is not so much love itself as it is the foundation of love, the material out of which love' can be made. It is potential love, as fire and Wwater unjoined are porential steam. Love is double. It is not in your heart, nor in mine, but in both united. It is the electric flame that plays be- tween the positive and the negative poles of the arc light. We are far from having fathomed the secrets of personality, but it is cer- tain that there are certain chemical compounds, so to speak, of souls; and these compounds differ from each in- dividual soul as much as water differs from oxygen or hydrogen. If T love you and you do not love me, it is torment. If you love me in return it is joy And the normal functioning of life is always joy, not pain. The Cloth Shop High Grade $I 8 Tailor-made FOR SPRING AND SUMMER. SUITS JOSEPH T. DONOVAN, ‘Phone 551. 327 Main Street. DR. C. R. CHAMBERLAIN Dental Surgeon In charge of Dr. 8. L. Geer’s practice during his last iliness. McGrory Building Norwich, Conn JEWETT CITY HOTEL New and Up-to-date in every partioular. LEWIS. Pecoriston. IRA F. MONEY LOANED on Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry and Securities of any kind at the Lowest Rate! Interest. An old established firm to deal with. (Established 1872.) THFE, COLLATBRAL LOAN Co., 142 Maln Street, Upstairs, The DimeSzwingsBzmk'i OF NORWICH, DIVIDEND The regular Semi-annual Dividend has been declared from the net earn- ings of the past six menths at the | rate of Four per cent. a year, and® will be payable en and after May 18, FRANK L. WOODARD, aprizidaw Treasuren, WEEN yeu wani 'e PUl FOUP Dus.. BgS8 Beters (e 0 o mw | m et RS edumas . Dollars 5 1 — e e Will purchase their fullest measure of value when buying your wants in Clothing, Hats and Furn- ishings, if your selection is from the fine showing of seasonable merchandise at 7 MORAN'S The genuine superiority of the famous Stein- Bloch Clothing is acknowledged by all, and our Suits at $18.00, $20.00, $22.50 and $25.00 ofithis superb make represent the utmost in Style, Fit and Tailoring, every garment equal to the highest class custom made. Qur Suits for Men +and Young Men AT $10.00, $12.00 AND $15.00 Represent the very best makes at the prices in the cloth- ing market, and the assortment at each price is suf- ficiently large to make a selection to give entire satis- faction. Our Hat Stock As always, is brimful of the season’s newest ideas, be- sides we are always preparedito meet the requirement of conservative men. “We are sole agent for the celebrated Knox Hat,” Bates-Street Shirt, Underwear, Silk and Lisle Hosiery, Nobby Neckwear, Soft and Stiff Collars, and everything seasonable for Man’s wear, at popular prices. “ASK FOR ROYAL GOLD TRADING STAMPS” John A. Moran Clothier, Hatter and Furnisher, ~ Cor. Main and Shetucket Streets Don’t Watch Other People Until It Is Too Late Some people do not value their money until it is gone. It will cost you nothing to come in and talk with us before you have to part with it. Save during youth and buy a home and take comfort in later years. No one is above saving, and no beginning is too small. We Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps. SCHWARTL BROS,, Telephone 965. WE DO UPHOLSTERING. Short Sea Trips NOTICE Norfolk, Old Point Comtort, Rich 3 mond, Baltimore, Washington, Ber- muda, Savannah and the South How to Lower the Price of Meat, Eat Plenty of FRESH FISH This Is the Best Time of Year to Eat Fish. Cunard White Star, Anchor, Ameri- ean, Red Star, French, Italian, North German Lloyd and other lines. Berths To And From Europe ‘ Fulyl‘ lnf‘nrmulnn of BLACK, BUTTER, MACKEREL JOHN A. DUNN. Real Every Day Fish at =@teamship and Tourlst Agent— pOWERS BROS. 80 Main Street <§Tel. 114 and 777. . 10 ROSE PLACR '