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NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
North Shore Breeze 
2 BPG CERUMID CO CTD © ES @ 
Published every Saturday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor and Proprietor. 
Telephones: Manchester 1387, 132-3. 
Knight Building, - Manchester, Mass. 
Subscription Rates: $1.00 a year; 3 months 
(trial) 25 cents. Advertising Rate Card on 
application. 
YS To insure publication, contributions must 
reach this office not later than Friday noon 
preceding the day of issue. 
Address all communications and make 
checks payable to NorrH SHORE BREEZE, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postoffice. 
VOLUME 6. - Fes. 8, 1908 NUMBER 6 
FEBRUARY 8—1!4 
SUN FULL TIDE. 
Rises Sets A M. P.M. 
8 Sa. 6 51 5.6 3.45 4.15 
9 Su. 6.50 5 4.40 5.11 
10 M 6.49 5,9 5.38 6.15 
YE Bee 6 47 5.10 6.33 AD 
TW: 6.46 tal oe 8.15 
13 Th, 6 45 5713 8.27 9 09 
14 Fy 6.44 5.14 9.17 9.55 
Town Meeting 
Is now only three weeks off, 
Anp the political bee is beginning to 
get busy; 
THouGu there does not appear to be 
much activity along the line; few can- 
didates have yet lined up. 
Ir is generally conceded that the pre- 
sent Board of Selectmen will be returned. 
And there isno reason why they should 
not be. They have performed their 
duty with credit to themselves and to 
the town. 
As to the Board of Assessors the con- 
sensus of opinion seems to be that the 
present incumbents, who are announc- 
ing their candidacy this week, should be 
elected to this office. Chairman Swett 
isa candidate for the three-year term, 
Edward S. Knight for the two-year term 
and Walter R. Bell for the one-year term. 
This board will probably be elected. 
A FEw other names have been men- 
tioned as being possible candidates, both 
for Selectmen and Assessors, but none of 
these, it appears to us, do the voters of 
the town stand ready to substitute for the 
efficient board we now have. One man, 
we understand, is seeking a position on 
the Board of Selectmen with no other 
object in view, it would appear, than to 
boost from office one of the officials ap- 
pointed by that board. The voters who 
want to support such a move as this are 
few and far between. A man who 
works on any such motives as this usual- 
ly turns out to he a pretty poor tool. 
A ‘‘fresh air school’’ unique among 
educational institutions in this country, 
was opened in- Providence, R. I., last 
week. The school is conducted 
doors, in that it is inside a building, but 
great swinging windows on three sides of 
each room, extending the length and 
width of each, and an extensive system 
of ventilation, afford an atmosphere of 
cold, pure air, free from germs, and 
easily adaptable to the conditions neces- 
sary to comfortable and hygienic study by 
each student. The school is built in the 
shape of an 'H, so that three sides of each 
room is exposed to the light. 
Although absolutely new in this coun- 
try, the ‘‘ fresh air school’’ is not an ex- 
periment, asit has demonstrated its use- 
fulness in European countries to. the ex- 
tent that in many cities in England and 
on the continent they are considered a 
necessary part of the school system. 
- WHISPERINGS. 
in~ 
The fence along the Norwood avenue 
side of the G. A. Priest school yard, 
Manchester, looks as if a miniature earth- 
quake had struck it, or as if one of those 
fissures we have been reading about the 
past few days had opened up along the 
line of the fence. The zig-zag line of 
the posts and iron rails is caused, no 
doubt, by the boys jumping and _ vaulting 
over the fence. 
* * 1k 1 
The man who opened up the wrong 
end of the “* pill box’’ on two occasions 
the other night, when two candidates 
were being voted upon at one of the 
Manchester societies, and showed the 
““black ball’? end of the ballot box to 
the presiding officer instead of the white 
ball partition, must have been seeing 
things “‘ wrong end to.’’ 
* * * . 
And the man who came into the 
BREEZE office yesterday morning inquir- 
ing for the Boston American Express 
office must have been reading that ‘‘ yel- 
low journal’’ for which Mrs. Ella 
Wheeler Wilson writes. 
Have your printing done at The 
Breeze Print, Manchester. 
Soctety Motes 
The Misses Katherine P. and Louise 
Loring closed their cottage at Prides 
Tuesday and have gone to Aiken, S. C.. 
to spend the ba’aice of the winter. 
Dr. Henry F. Sears and family closed 
their house, near Chapman’s corner, 
Beverly Cove, Thursday, and will spend 
the next two months at Jeckel’s Island, 
off the Georgia coast. 
Eben D. Jordon sailed on the Saxonia 
on her last outward trip and will spend — 
the next few months in a tour of Eng- 
land, France, Switzerland, and Southern 
Europe. He will return the last of June 
and will come at once to his. West Man- 
chester estate. 
OGD CRESS? CS SESE GS ape 
Advertising Suggestions 
OeS GD TREE? 2 EEE cp ard 
When a man has a superior article at 
a reasonable price and gives proper pub-— 
licity the beaten paths from his door may 
well radiate in all directions; but without 
publicity the grass will grow green on 
his door step. 
RESOLUTIONS. 
Lodge, No. 
I. oO. eh F. 
WHEREAS, in His 
Magnolia 49, 
infinite wisdom, it has 
pleased Almighty God, to call’ from us our es-' 
teemed Brother Stephen Eldredge, and 
Wue_rEAs, in his decease, Magnolia lodge has 
suffered the loss of one whose interest in the 
Lodge was deep and whose services to the Lodge 
have been many, be it therefore 
ResoLveD, that while humbly submitting to 
Divine Wisdom, we deeply mourn the death of 
our late brother and extend to his family our 
sincere and heartfelt sympathy in their bereave- — 
ment. Be it further 
ResoLveD that our Charter be draped in 
mourning for thirty days, these resolutions be — 
spread upon our records, a copy sent to his — 
family and a copy published in the local papers. 
Manchester, Mass., Jan. 30, 1908. 
CHILDREN’S SCHOOL SHOES: 
A Complete line of 
WINTER 
SHOES 
CHAS. HOOPE 
Central Sq. 
) Manchester 
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