20 
MANCHESTER 
Selectman George R. Dean is hav- 
ing a vacation from his work with 
Smith’s express Co. He plans to 
visit Washington to present the de- 
sires of the town of Manchester to 
have the government do something 
toward removing the treacherous 
rocks at the entrance to Manchester 
harbor. 
Fresh oysters at Swett’s 
Fish Market. adv 
Manchester eggs, fresh laid, 37¢ 
doz. at Bullock Bros. adv 
Felt boots, overshoes and rubbers 
daily 
at Walt Bell’s, Central Sq, adv 
Four-in-hand ties, new spring 
styles, at E. A. Lethbridges, adv 
Subscribe for the Breeze, $2.00 per 
year, postpaid. 
and inform its readers. 
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An Honest, Independent, Clean Newspaper 
Springfield Republican 
Massachusetts 
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(Established in 1824 by Samuel Bowles) 
Daily (Morning), $8; Sunday$2; Weekly, $1 a Year 
A DISTINGUISHED AMERICAN EDITOR AND. PUBLISHER has 
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news is first-class, likewise your editorials, and 
ment of the news in your field is simply superb.’’ 
A COMPLETE NEWSPAPER is what The Republican aims to be every day 
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It has its own views on public questions 
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paper is to present the facts which will enable the people to 
conclusions. In this spirit and with this object The Republican’s Editorial Page 
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THE REPUBLICAN’S NEWS SERVICE is prompt, thorough, painstaking. 
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correspondents at Boston and Washington 
It presents its news with intelligence, discrimina- 
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Republican appealing especially to all who are interested in literature and the 
arts, but embracing as well a wide variety of entertaining reading. 
THE SUNDAY REPUBLICAN oerows each year fuller in volume and richer 
g in diverting, instructive and helpful features. 
—% superior magazine, covering a wide range of human interests, but adapted es- 
5 pecially to Western New England tastes and interests. 
THE WEEKLY REPUBLICAN carries the marked New England flavor but 
is an increasingly national journal in its character and in its 
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all carefully edited and arranged in 16 broad 
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THE REPUBLICAN, Springfield, Mass. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
More Snow for Shore. 
Like the ships that ‘‘pass in the 
night,’’ the blanket of snow which 
has covered the North Shore for the 
past two weeks, stole away follow- 
ing the steady rain of the last week- 
end, only to pay a return visit to- 
day, when the ground once more 
took on a fleecy appearance. AI- 
though official spring is but two 
weeks away, weather in all its 57 
varieties may be expected before 
the grass begins to brighten up. 
March certainly came in like the 
proverbial lion, the high winds of 
Sunday night impairing telephone 
service in many places, and in some 
towns along the shore putting many 
homes in darkness when electric 
light wires were blown down. There 
were no accidents reported at sea 
lately 
It seems 
your typographical arrange- 
and is not 
reach their own 
It employs able special 
Its Sporting News pages are particu- 
at 
It is in fact, more and more a 
audience. It con- 
editorial’ articles, special de- 
The Weekly Re- 
Address 
along the shore, although a five- 
masted schooner was grounded for 
a time after being driven to port 
in the storm of Sunday night off 
Marblehead. 
Manchester eggs, fresh laid, 37¢ 
doz. at Bullock Bros. adv 
Oysters fresh every day at 
Swett’s fish market. adv 
The state of New York has just 
published a comprehensive report of 
its wood-using industries. 
In an ordinary argument hot air 
counts for about as much as real 
logic, 
Extra Tickets on Pullmans. } 
On March 1, and thereafter, on ail 
lines in the United States and Can- 
ada, it will be necessary for pas- 
sengers in parlor or sleeping cars, 
ceccupying drawing-rooms, to hold 
not less than two adult passenger 
tickets, while in compartments not 
less than one and one-half adult pas- 
senger tickets will be required. 
Lodgepole pine seed sown broad- 
cast on the snow in southern Idaho 
last spring germinated when the snow 
melted, and as many as 60 little trees 
were counted to the square foot. The 
summer was so dry, however, that 
most of the plants died, except where 
sheltered by brush or logs. 
They seem to have found some- 
thing new in Gloucester as a scheme_ 
for celebrating Washington’s birth- 
day. 
given by members of Atlantic Tem- 
ple of Honor, when an enormous 
halibut will be barbecued after the 
fashion of the ox barbecues that are 
a feature of politics and cattle fairs 
in some parts of the country. 
THE LoyAList. 
They are already asking for jobs on 
the ground of party services rendered. 
One of the successful candidates tells 
us that yesterday morning he was ap- 
proached by a rough neck whom he 
positively knew to be a member of the 
defeated party. 
“Well,” said the 
“what do you want?” 
“T want you to remember me when 
you begin to give out jobs.” 
“Why what did you ever do for me 
or the party?” 
“Didn't I stick up for you all durin’ 
the campaign?” 
“Stick up for me? 
Republican.” 
“Sure but I stuck up for you, I’m 
a billposter.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer 
jobber-elect, 
Why, you're a 
It is to be a “halibut barbecue,” 
‘77 
