14 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Published every Saturday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor and Proprietor. 
Postoffice Block, Manchester, Mass. 
Branch Office: 116 Rantoul 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 publication, contributions must reach 
thiS office not later than Friday noon preceding the 
day of issue. : : 
Al 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. “ee 
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 9-13, Beverly 335-3. 
VOLUME 3. NUMBER 20 
SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1906. 
Necessity for 
Continued Assistance. 
The local California Relief com- 
mittee this week received a circular 
from the Massachusetts general 
committee in which were extracts 
of letters received from their repre- 
sentative in San Francisco. A 
perusal of these letters would show 
the necessity for continued assist- 
ance for the people of the stricken 
city. Under the date of April 30, 
John F. Moors writes Major Henry 
L. Higginson of Manchester and 
Boston, a member of the general 
committee: 
“The one thing most needed here 
is simplification, and the best thing 
that has been done has been the 
putting of all purchases into hands 
of a special committee. All needs 
are reported to this committee, and 
orders are sent out by it with an in- 
clusive knowledge of all the condi- 
tions. Individual appeals, based on 
very partial knowledge, will con- 
tinue the chaos from which all the 
wise people are doing their utmost 
to emerge. 
“It would make you heartsick to 
see the city. What is left is hardly 
more than the suburbs, and a large 
part of that has been knocked out 
of shape. The people are the tragic 
thing—the refuges fighting their 
way out with their small belong- 
ings, the swarms of idle people in 
the parks and streets, the quiet,brave 
people, facing the loss of every- 
thing with simplicity. 
“The time is surely coming when 
money can be so distributed that it 
will be like seed planted in the 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
ground, capable of multiplying it- 
self a hundred fold. The awfulness 
of this disaster must not blind us to 
the fact that the poor, paralyzed 
place must do its best to regain its 
life. The idleness here is appalling. 
Some of it will last till the poor old 
people, the fat and the thin, and 
the sick and the nondescript, are 
gathered to their fathers.” 
NEW BOOKS 
In the Manchester Public Library, Most of 
Them Recently Purchased 
FICTION 
Red Anvil 
Good Red Earth 
In Old Bellaire 
Maker of History 
13th District 
Barbara Winslow, Rebel 
Wheel of Life 
Around the World with Josiah Allen’s 
Wife 
Last Spike 
Cecilia’s Lovers 
Land ho! 
Nita 
Black Barque 
Girl in Waiting 
Silas Strong 
Girl From Tim’s Place 
Piney Home 
Delightful Dodd 
Sage Brush Parson 
Prisoner of Ornith Farm 
The Spoilers 
Lady Baltimore 
Fishers of Men 
Plebe at West Point 
Squire Phlin 
The Quickening 
‘Lords of the Soil,” 
Captains All 
Hearts and Creeds 
Randvar the Songsmith 
The Challenge 
In the Shoe String Country 
Yolanda 
Coming of the King 
Submarine Tour 
Law of the Land 
Jay Gould Harmon 
Daughter of the Rich 
’ Heart’s Desire 
Conquest of Canaan 
Mystery of June 13th 
Green Shay 
Paradise 
My Friend the Chauffeur 
Coming of the Tide 
Millionaire’s Baby 
Heart of Lady Anne 
The Debtor 
Rose o’ the River 
Ye Lyttle Salem Maide 
Highway of Fate 
Rue with a Difference 
Soldier of the Valley 
Fair Margaret 
Hundred Days 
The Evasion 
Red Chief 
Servant of the Public 
Tales of the Fish Patrol 
House of a Thousand Candles 
Daughter of the South 
Social Secretary . 
Fair Maid of Graystones 
Nedra 
OTHER CLASSES 
Short History of Venice Thayer 
Story of the Stock Exchange Duguid 
Invasion of the Crimea, 9 vols. 
Kinglake 
Americans of 1776 Schouler 
Life of Emile Zola Vizetelly 
Handbook U.S. Political History 
Townsend 
History of England, 10 vols. Lingard 
Westminster Besant 
Chinese Life in Town and Country 
Bard 
Life of Father Taylor 
Life of Paul Jones, Founder of the 
American Navy, 2 vols. Buell 
Outlines of Roman History Pelham 
History of Rome Shuckburgh 
Games for Everybody Hofmann 
Eternal Life Munsterberg 
Fisherman’s Luck Van Dyke 
Forty-five Years Under the Flag 
Schley 
Woman who Wentto Alaska Sullivan 
Home Life in France Edwards 
Rulers of the South, 2 vols. Crawford 
Short History of Natural Science 
Buckley 
Story of the Nineteenth Century Sci- 
ence Williams 
Tour Through Famine District of 
India Merewether 
From Servitude to Service 
Miller and others 
Montaigne’s Essays Hazlitt 
Marmontel’s Moral Tales 
Saintsbury, Ed. 
Crothers 
Walsh 
Endless Life 
Modern Martyr 
FOR SALE! 
One Extra Good Cow; also three tons of 
Hay. ; 
Apply, 
GILMAN M. BURNHAM, 
Sea street, Manchester. 
OUR MANCHESTER FRIENDS 
Will find what they need in SHOES at our 
New Shoe Store. 
W. Frank Parsons & Bro. 
81 Main Street, - Gloucester, Mass. 
H. STATLAND 
(Formerly with R. H. White Co. and Macullar, Par 
ker Co., Boston,) 
Has opened a Ladies’ and Gents’ 
Custom Tailoring Establishment 
In the Kimball Block, Manchester. 
Garments Altered, Cleansed, Dyed, Pressed 
and Repaired at Reasonable Prices. 
