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NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Published every Saturday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor and Proprietor. 
Lee’s Block, Manchester, Mass. 
Branch Office: 116 Rantoul Street, Beverly, Mass. 
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Communications solicited on matters of public in- 
terest. 
Address all communications and make checks paya- 
ble to NoRTH SHORE BREEZE, Manchester, Mass, 
Entered as second-class matter April 8, 1905, at the 
Postoffice at Manchester, Mass., under the Act of 
Congress of March 3, 1879. 
Telephones: Manchester 11-2, Beverly 335-3. 
VOLUME 3. NUMBER 9 
SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1906. 
Senator Schofield from this district 
was returned to the board of select- 
men of the town of Ipswich Tuesday, 
receiving the largest vote cast. 
In Search of Long-Lost Diary 
Editor of the North Shore Breeze: 
Inquiry has been made if there are 
other “unpublished letters” of the 
Tutor in St. Paul’s school in existence. 
The writer does not know of any, but 
if others should be ‘‘discovered”’ they 
will be given to the BREEzE in due 
time. The writer may add that he is 
in search of a long-lost diary kept by 
Sir Roger de Coverley’s chaplain, 
which he hopes yet to light upon. 
Date le 
Boston, March 5. 
WHISPERINGS 
It did me good to see our venerable 
librarian, Delucena L. Bingham—now 
in his 92d year—out to the Manches- 
ter town meeting this week. He was 
one of the most interested attendants, 
his interest keeping him late both 
Monday and Tuesday evenings, even 
after scores of the younger men had 
left the hall. He took part in the 
discussions and offered several mo- 
tions, taking a firm stand on the vari- 
ous things at issue. If the younger 
voters took such an interest in the 
affairs of the town there would be no 
occasion for the moderator to call the 
meeting sleepy, and wait for somebody 
to second the motions. 
Eight women voters cast their bal- 
lots Monday for school committee. 
NEW CHURCH EDIFICE 
Sacred Heart Church, Mancheten to have a New Home. Structure will 
be of Stone and Plans will be in Hand Shortly 
The matter of a new home for the 
Sacred Heart church in Manchester, 
talked of for some time, has this week 
assumed definite form and the BREEZE 
is able to announce today that work 
will be started on a church just as 
soon as the specifications are out and 
the bids are made. 
Rev. Wm. F. Powers, who has been 
working quietly and conservatively on 
the matter since coming to Manches- 
ter, has now arrived at the point 
where his plans have assumed action, 
and this week Archbishop Williams 
agreed to his plans and sanctioned 
them. 
The church-is to be of stone, in 
rubble work, very similar to that in 
the public library, and the trimmings 
will be in split boulders. The archi- 
tecture will be of the 14th century 
perpendicular Gothic style, a repro- 
duction almost of the English church 
of 700 years ago. 
Fr, Powers is somewhat of a student 
of architecture, and the style which 
he has selected is very rare indeed, 
and is very dignified in comparison to 
the graceful lines of the continental 
Gothic. 
The interior of the edifice will be 
107 ft., 8 in. long, the knave being 80 
ft., 8 in., and the sanctuary 27 ft., and 
the width 55 ft., 4 in. The seating 
capacity will be abont 620. A sacristy 
27 x 17 feet will be built. 
The building will stand on the old 
church lot and on the new ones re- 
Hadley—Crombie 
Fred J. Hadley and Miss Rachel 
E. Crombie, both formerly of Man- 
chester, were united in marriage at 
Lynn on Thursday evening of this 
week. The ceremony was performed 
by Rev. Arthur E. Harriman, pastor 
of the East Baptist church. The ring 
service was used, and the ceremony 
was witnessed ‘by relatives and inti- 
mate friends of the contracting par- 
ties. After a short wedding tour Mr. 
and Mrs. Hadley will be at home to 
their friends at 7 Avon place, Somer- 
ville. 
The contracting parties have hosts 
of friends in Manchester who wish 
them joy in their new venture. The 
bride is the daughter of Mrs. Eliza 
Crombie of Pleasant street, and was 
formerly a student at the Story High 
school. The groom holds a responsi- 
ble position with a piano manufactur- 
ing company in Cambridge. 
BREEZE subscription $1.00 a year. 
cently acquired by Fr. Powers, the 
front of the structure standing back 
20 feet from the sidewalk, and the 
side line will be about 25 ft. from Burn- 
ham’s lane. 
A tower, practically detached from 
the main building, will fill the eye 
from Vine street, but in all probability 
this will not be built in the near future. 
The tower battlements will be about 
62 feet from the ground and from this 
a spire will rise about 45 ft. high. 
One good feature of the building 
will be the number of doors, provision 
being made for five. Two. of these 
will be in the facade ; another through 
the tower, in which there will also be a 
stairway to the choir gallery. There 
will be another through the sacristy 
and one through a porch on Burnham’s 
lane. 
The rear line of the structure and 
the sacristy will be three feet from 
the present building. The front ele- 
vation from the ground to the gable 
will be 52 ft, 6 in. and from the 
ground to the side 22 feet. 
The heavy buttress work will add 
to the ornate structure of the exterior. 
It is planned to get the structure in 
such shape that it can be roofed over 
by next winter, and using it the next 
summer, and then proceed as the 
financial status will allow. 
Maginnis, Walsh & Sullivan of Bos- 
ton, one of the best known firms in 
the country, are the architects. 
Selectmen Organize 
The Manchester board of selectmen 
organized yesterday with the choice 
of Fred. K. Swett, chairman, and Wm. 
E. Kitfield, clerk, the same as last 
year. 
Great reduction in Millinery. Mlle 
Keyou, 113 Main street, Gloucester. 
Engagement and wedding rings at 
Winchester’s, jeweler, Post Office sq., 
Gloucester, Mass/ 182 Main st. * 
Special Hearing 
A hearing is called at the Selectmen’s 
office next Thursday afternoon, March 15, at 
4 o’clock, on petition of George F. Dyer to 
store and sell gasolene and lubricating oils 
in his garage, corner of Pine and Bennett 
streets. 
BOARD OF SELECTMEN 
OF MANCHESTER. 
