20% 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Published every Saturday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor and Proprietor. 
Pulsifer’s Block, Manchester, Mass. 
Branch Office: 5 Washington Street, Beverly, Mass. 
BEVERLY PRINTING CO., PRINTERS, 
Beverly, Mass. 
Terms: $1.00 a year ; 3 months (trial), 25 cents. 
Advertising Rates on application. 
To insure aa ease contributions must reach 
this office not later than Friday noon preceding the 
day of issue. 
All communications must be accompanied by the 
sender’s name, not necessarily for publication, but as a 
guarantee of good faith. 
Communications solicited on matters of public in- 
terest. 
Address all communications and make checks paya- 
ble to NORTH SHORE BREEZE, Manchester, Mass. 
The BREEZE is for sale at all news stands on the 
North Shore. 
Entered as second-class matter May 23, 1904, at the 
post-office at Beverly, Mass., under the Act of Congress 
of March 3, 1879. 
Telephones: Manchester 9-13, Beverly 143-4. 
VOLUME 1. NUMBER 47. 
SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1906. 
CHANGE OF ADDRESS. 
Readers of the BREEZE who are 
about to change their address, either to 
move to the North Shore, or otherwise, 
will confer a great favor upon the editor 
if they will send their new address to 
this office, Manchester, [lass. This 
will not only insure discontinuance at 
the old, but a prompt delivery at the new 
address. 
ANNOUNCEMENT. 
As announced several weeks ago, 
today’s issue of the Breeze is mailed 
from Manchester post office. There 
are several reasons why this change 
is brought about. 
In order to have the paper pass 
through the mails as second class 
matter, we are obliged by law to 
have a “known office of publica- 
tion.” Since the first issue of the 
Breeze this has been in Beverly, be- 
cause it was more convenient when 
the paper was first issued to have 
it mailed in Beverly. It appears, 
as the paper grows, however, that 
Manchester is the more desirable 
place for its office of publication, 
and the change is made primarily 
for that reason. 
Though the Breeze will continue 
to be, as it was at the start, a pub- 
lication “devoted to the best inter- 
ests of the North Shore,” we find, 
as we grow, that Manchester claims 
a good percentage of the circulation 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
and advertising, so, for that reason, 
we feel Manchester a more proper 
place to have our home. 
Then, again, Manchester is more 
properly the center of the North 
Shore than is the Garden City. 
The change means simply that 
the paper will be mailed in Man- 
chester and sent from there to our 
Beverly Farms, Prides Crossing, 
Beverly, Magnolia and, in fact, all 
our readers. The paper will remain 
the same, and it will, for the pres- 
ent, continue to be printed in Bev- 
erly. 
MY ORCHARDS. 
These trees were always old, it seemed to 
me— 
Old, gnarled and staid, of mien grandfather- 
peLY’s 
Here in this quiet place, for aught I know 
They were set out a hundred years ago; 
But in the memory of man, folk tell 
They have not failed to do their duty well, 
And no one living now recalls a spring 
When they were not arrayed “as for a king.”’ 
Now, passing glorious ’neath the vernal 
skies, 
Truly, these have grown old in gorgeous 
guise, 
Proving what grace, what beauty may en- 
gage 
The ripe fulfillment of a rare old age. 
FRANK WALCOTT HUTT. 
Whisperings. 
I was much interested Thursday af- 
ternoon to get hold of a copy of the 
“Cunard Daily Bulletin,’ a twenty- 
four page newspaper, or booklet, pub- 
lished on board the “ Ivernia”’ of the 
Cunard line, on which Messrs. Hoare 
and Sinnicks came from England this 
week. The fact that it is printed on 
board a ship in mid-ocean is the prin- 
cipal thing of interest about it, and 
yet, I suppose, the fact that it prints 
news, — real live news, — the happen- 
ings on both continents, while in the 
middle of the broad ocean is the most 
wonderful thing in connection with it. 
This is made possible through the 
Marconi system of wireless  tele- 
graphy. 
The copy I have gives the “ wire- 
less news from Cape Cod,” and is 
dated Wednesday, April 5. Among 
other items of news is the latest 
reports from the seat of war. 
* * * * 
It may be of interest in this con- 
nection to note the amount of food 
consumed during the eight days’ trip 
by the 2003 third-class passengers : 408 
pounds of tea, 820 pounds of coffee, 
5,052 pounds of sugar, 60 kegs of 
pickles, 1,460 pounds jam, 19,800 
pounds or 100 barrels of flour, 1,378 
pounds dried fruit, 21,219 pounds of 
beef, mutton, pork, etc., 3,414 pounds 
fresh fish, 308 fowls, 1,200 quarts fresh 
milk, 700 pounds ice cream, 18,600 
eggs, 39,486 pounds potatoes, and 
$235 worth of vegetables. 
* * * * 
I hear whisperings of a new yacht 
club being formed in Manchester, — 
a miniature yacht club. And some of 
the best known young men in the 
town are instigators in the scheme. 
In and about Boston there has been 
for several years past considerable in- 
terest manifest over races between 
miniature yachts. This club being 
talked of in Manchester is interested 
in these small boats, too, I am told, 
and some snappy racing may be looked 
for this summer. The young men 
whoare interested are said to be Harry 
Tappan, Hollis Roberts, Harry Swett, 
George Scott, John Olson and Hans 
Dehl. 
Some of these young men already 
have yachts, and the rest are having 
boats built. Last week, while getting 
ready for a race downat the boat yard, 
I am told, one of the yachtsmen, so- 
called, became so intensely interested 
that he leaped (or did he slip) into the 
chilly waters. 
Nance O’Neil at Tremont. 
Those entertaining members of the 
Shakespeare community, Lady Mac- 
beth and her semi-barbarous husband, 
were re-introduced to the Boston pub- 
lic at the Tremont theatre on Monday 
evening last. The young, attractive 
and popular American tragedienne, 
Miss Nance O'Neil was the Lady 
Macbeth, supported in an effective 
and impressive manner by Charles 
Dalton as Macbeth, Charles Millward 
as Macduff and Louis Massen as 
Banqus. The first week of Miss 
O’Neil’s farewell was divided between 
“Macbeth ’”’ and Giacommetti’s trag- 
edy, “‘ Elizabeth, Queen of England,” 
and the same attention to detail was 
as conspicuous a characteristic in the 
Elizabethan plays as was observed 
in the Shakesperean tragedy. The 
second week of Miss O’Neil’s engage- 
ment at the Tremont will embrace a 
round of her most popular and suc- 
cessful plays. The repertoire will be 
as follows: Monday evening and 
Wednesday afternoon “Magda,” Tues- 
day evening, ‘‘Fires of St. John,” 
Wednesday and Saturday evenings, 
‘‘The Jewess,’’ and Thursday and 
Friday evenings and Saturday after- 
noon, “Camille.” 
WANTED 
By an experienced woman, work by the 
day; washingor cleaning. Apply to 
B. M. D., over Legg’s Market, 
r Manchester. i 
