2 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
of the Board of directors of the West 
Beach corporation. 
It was the opinion of that meeting 
that decided improvements were 
needed, such as would meet the re- 
quirements of today. It was practi- 
cally decided, if sufficient financial 
aid can be received, the old bath- 
houses will be removed and a _ hand- 
some, new, public pavilion will be 
erected ; this building to be furnished 
with all modern conveniences, such as 
shower baths, resting rooms, individ- 
ual dressing-rooms, etc. Such a 
building would be supported by a 
small fee charged for the use of the 
rooms. 
The summer residents are becoming 
interested in the movement, and 
though it is improbable anything will 
be done this next season, the scheme 
will ultimately be carried through. 
FINEST IMPORTED 
Turkish and Oriental 
Pea GigneleTOBAUS 
FRANK G. CHEEVER CO. 
Prescription Pharmacists, 
CENTRAL SQUARE, 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, 
Tel. 130. MASS. 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
Undeveloped parcels of Jand from one-to thirty acres. 
Good view of ocean. Great brat pO to buy for 
building purposes or investment. ORRIN A MAR- 
TIN, Summer stre.t, Manchester, Mass. 
A TELEPOONE 
in your home or office 
makes 
Safety, Comfort 
Convenience 
and 
Satisfaction. 
ADDRESS 
New England Telephone & Telegraph 
G0, Boston, Mass. 
New Teacher. 
A new teacher has been added to 
the teaching force of the George A. 
Priest school of Manchester during 
the past week. Last fall Principal 
Albert Mead made an application to 
the school committee for an assistant 
in the building. Though the commit- 
tee have looked favorably upon the 
request, they have deferred action till 
now, Mr. Mead’s illness of last week 
undoubtably hastening the matter to 
a head. 
Miss Larah D. Fish, daughter of 
Superintendent Fish, has been ap- 
pointed by the committee. She has 
taught successfully three years, and 
comes to Manchester from the Wel- 
lington Training shool of Cambridge. 
Miss Fish has studied at both Vassar 
and Smith. Her position in the Priest 
school is not that of a teacher in any 
particular room or department, but 
that of assisting in any of the grades 
where the principal may deem neces- 
sary. 
Though the George A. Priest school 
is not crowded, in the sense commonly 
implied, some of the grades, with 40 
to 50 pupils, are too much care for 
one teacher, and the fact that the 
principal has more or Jess supervision 
over each grade has made it evident 
to the committe they were right in 
appointing another teacher. 
A Monopoly of the Sky. 
In the World’s Work is a curious 
new phase of the subject of wireless te- 
legraphy. Eugene P. Lyle, jr., writes : 
Law already controls not only the 
surface of the earth, but its depths. 
And now civilization requires that law 
shall control the atmosphere. The 
ownership of the sky calls for regulat- 
ing. So eight nations have been con- 
ferring and drawing up protocols to 
prevent the monopoly of the heavens. 
In the preliminary congress at Ber- 
lin the delegates from America, Ger- 
many, Austria, Spain, Italy, France, 
Hungary and Russia drew up a plan 
for an international convention, as 
follows: The service of operating 
wireless stations is to be organized so 
as not to interfere with the service of 
other nations. Coastwise stations are 
to receive and transmit telegrams 
from ships without distinction as to 
systems employed by the ships. The 
tolls for such international communi- 
cation - areeto shew fixed: w) Stations, 
where possible, must ‘give priority to 
calls for help from ships at sea. Fur- 
thermore, there must be a universal 
code and universel tuning (except in 
special and secret cases), and the bick- 
erings of rivals must be silenced for 
the common good. The world con- 
siders wireless its property. 
Advertise in the KBREEZRF. 
New this Geck. 
MANCHESTER, MAss., Nov. 18, 1904. 
The Honorable Board of Selectmen, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Gentlemen: The undersigned, legal voters 
of Manchester, do hereby petition your 
Honorable Body to survey, locate and lay 
out asa town way, the passage way now 
leading from Central street at a point near 
the stone arch bridge to property of the 
town known as the Stone Mill. 
FREDERICK J. MERRILL 
and seven others. 
Jan. 23, 1905. 
In Board of Selectmen: 
On the petition aforesaid, it is ORDERED 
that at least seven days notice be given to 
John W. Marshall, Frederick J. Merrill, 
Samuel Knight, Oliver T. Roberts, William 
Hoare, heirs of Asa Richardson, heirs of 
Daniel Mahoney, and all other persons in- 
terested, that the Selectmen intend to lay 
out a town way beginning at the intersection 
of the private way known as Elm lane, and 
running northerly over, and taking, land of 
Samuel Knight, Frederick J. Merrill, Roberts 
and Hoare, heirs of Asa Richardson, and the 
Town of Manchester, to land of one South- 
wick, and that on the 1st day of February, 
at 7.30 o’clock P.M., in the Selectmen’s 
office in the Town Hall building, are ap- 
pointed as the time and place for hearing of 
parties in objection to such lay out and 
takings. And at which time and place the 
Selectmen will take such action as by law 
they may be authorized to do. 
It is further ORDERED that an attested 
copy of the above petition be posted on the 
Town Hall building and published in the 
Manchester Cricket and the North’ Shore 
Breeze in at least one issue preceding the 
holding of this hearing. 
FRED K. SWEPT; 
Sec’y of Board. 
TOWN TREASURER’S NOTICE. 
MANCHESTER. 
All persons owing the town, and all per- 
sons to whom the town owes money, will call 
on or before February 4, 1905, and settle 
accounts. 
The Town Treasurer’s office will be closed 
to business from Saturday, February 4, to 
February 18, except Saturday, February 11, 
owing to balancing of accounts for the year. 
EDWIN P. STANLEY, 
Town Treasurer. 
a 
FOUND. 
Saturday evening, on School street, Man- 
chester, a string of gold beads. Owner can 
obtain same after proving, by applying 
MANCHESTER POLICE STATION. 
FOR SALE. 
Thirty to forty Barrels of good Baldwin 
Apples. Inquire of 
GILMAN M. BURNHAM, 
Manchester, Mass. 
