3332 
Salted and 
Pickled 
».. FISH 
“¥ 
>3e> 
23232552523 233233 5 25 F2F 
Medium Shore Mackerel ........+-+++++- 
Fancy Large Mackerel......-.. eT ae 
SaliNO TMT OUGalte me Lato: ciclain Peanitrenee shared 
Large Fancy Split Herring -......-..)... 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 9 
SPTDIIIDIDIFSPSSSSSSSSIITSIIDIIISISSSIIIF PIII PIII PIII DIIIIIIS SSS SS SSS SS SS SS SSO SSS SSSTA 
SORE ORE ore Ca Ble tone 3 for 25c 
sf ohalidi tue sere eae areas Rare ot 18c, 2 for 35c 
BOAR nar SA CIEE Sic voip aerk bP RU | 10c lb 
Smoked Halibut Chips 1/04 Red oub ele. sell gs dass seis nce cam nee Ap yes ge > 10c pkg 
Fancy Codfish, 3-lb. box (entirely boneless) ......- +... +++. essere cence ee, 5Oc box 
TOOT OT RU IETS Lh TACOS eet che ere ato eck looms wana es cu plaeiaia lalla ax Susie oa tale op aetna) olny sta Reamer 14c pkg 
Bibredean dS hreddeduWo diye cizs basi We uriend okaltae ay aabara Nena. cat are] Syananenc nave fen ti feons 10c pkg 
Boneless od inDUlk saci ale aids) sists 
English Cured Entirely Boneless Salt Cod 
Extra Iceland Halibut 
Arcadia Bloaters 
Cromarty BloaterS. .......2 269-08 +sse+- 
GET OUR EGG PRICES: Near-by Henney Eggs - -  - 
Two deliveries weekly in Beverly Farms and Manchester 
27 doz 
2 
9 
CF 62 
oo oN 
A\ essex Amt St. Peter streets, 
by a 
\ COBB, BATES & YERXA 60., SALEM, MASS. 
* - TELEPHONE — 940. Private Branch Exchange connecting all departments. 
Town Meeting 
Town meeting is at hand. Monday 
morning at nine o'clock the voters 
will assembleand in the morning some 
business of minor importance will be 
disposed of. At 12 0’clock the polls 
will open for election of officers and 
may close not later than 5.30. 
The usual excitement accompany- 
ing town meeting is absent this year, 
but though indications point toa quiet 
time, there may be considerable ex- 
citement before the business of the 
meeting is disposed of. 
There is very little competition in- 
deep over the various offices. Walter 
R. Bell is the only candidate outside 
the old board running for selectmen, 
and his friends feel confident he will 
have a place on the board this year. 
There are three candidates for tree 
warden, three for school committee 
and two for the water board, as shown 
by the specimen ballot printed in an- 
other column. 
> Town Reports Out 
The Manchester Town Reports for 
1906 are out and were distributed 
around town Tuesday and Wednesday. 
The report is the largest ever published 
by the town and reflects much credit 
upon Town Akuditor, Frank G. 
Cheever, as well as upon the Beverly 
Printing Company, who printed the 
book for the North Shore Breeze. As 
the reports have probably been gen- 
erally read by this time, a discussion 
of its contents is uncalled for here. 
New This Ueck. 
Card of Thanks 
We wish to sincerely thank our many 
friends who were so kind in our recent be- 
reavement, also for the beautiful floral tri b- 
utes. 
Mrs. WILLIAM H. HASKELL 
AND FAMILY. 
Manchester, March 2, 1906. 
MANCHESTER 
In his report Sup’t Fish this year 
calls the attention of the parents to 
the work of the pupils in the following 
words: “Parental co-operation is of the 
highest importance. Every parent 
should scan closely the monthly re- 
port to discover especially what esti- 
mate the teacher places upon the ef- 
forts of his boy or girl. Attainments 
are important but not so important as 
industry and zeal.” 
The reports have just been sent out 
for the grammar school pupils for 
February and they have in addition to 
the regular marking for excellence in 
study, the “mark of effort.” 1 indi- 
cates steady and regular effort,——a de- 
termination to do one’s best; 2 indi- 
cates spasmodic effort—good one day 
and poor the next, and 3 indicates 
indifference. Sup’t Fish urges that 
parents inspect carefully the monthly 
reports and insist upon 1 as the mark 
of effort in each subject. 
Ladies, have you read Pattillo’s adv. 
on page 4? 
The financial statement of the 
Board of Selectmen of Manchester 
for the year just closing is the best yet 
made by any board of selectmen of 
the town in recent years. The net in- 
debtedness of the town Feb. 1, 1905, 
was $78,935.01. This year it is $71,- 
281.79, and this despite the fact anew 
loan of $34,000 has been made in con- 
nection with the new primary school 
building. The net decrease in the 
debt for the year is $7,653.22, and the 
cash on hand is $19,909.99. 
Born, Thursday, March 1, a son to 
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Saulnier. 
Michael J. Flaherty, son of ‘ Peo” 
Flaherty of Manchester, who works at 
the office of the Beverly Printing 
Company, where the Breeze is printed 
met with a severe and very painful ac- 
cident Wednesday. He was working 
on one of the presses and in some way 
his hand became caught, squeezing it, 
tearing the flesh and breaking two of 
his fingers. 
Edward Gould Mead of Wellesley 
Farms has been spending the past few 
days with Mrs. Woodbury. 
Harry Slade returned Sunday from 
a visit with his cousin, Thos. P. An- 
drews in Portsmouth, N.H. 
The Candidates 
The list of candidates to be voted 
on at the Manchester town election, 
Monday, according to the specimen 
ballot posted yesterday, is as follows: 
‘Town Clerk, 1 year. 
*Alfred S. Jewett, 
Selectmen, Assessors and Overseers, 1 year. 
Walter R. Bell, 
*William E. Kitfield, 
*Edward S. Knight, 
*Fred K. Swett, 
Collector of Taxes, 1 year. 
*Edwin P. Stanley, 
Town Treasurer, 1 year. 
*E dwin P. Stanley, 
School Committee, 3 years. 
William J. Dougherty, 
* Alfred C. Needham, 
Curtis B. Stanley, 
Auditor, 1 year. 
*Frank G. Cheever, 
Water Commissioner, 3 years. 
George E. Hildreth, 
*Jeffrey T. Stanley, 
Trustee Public Library, 1 year. 
*Delucena L. Brigham, 
Trustee of Cemeteries, 3 years. 
*Edward A. Lane, 
Park Commissioner, 3 years. 
*Duncan T. Beaton, 
Tree Warden, 1 year. 
Robert A. Mitchell, 
Jeffrey S. Reed, 
*William Young, 
Constables, 1 year. 
*Leonard Andrews, 
*Louis O. Lations, 
Joseph P. Leary, 
*Thomas H. Sheehan, 
Trustee Mem. Library Bldg. Fund, 8 years. 
*T. Jefferson Coolidge, 
*Present incumbent. 
