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Published every Friday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor and Proprietor. 
Telephones: Manchester 137, 132-3. 
Knight Building, - Manchester, Mass. 
$2.00 a year; 3 
Advertising Rate 
Subscription Rates: 
months (trial) 50 cents. 
Card on application. 
p@e To insure publication, contributio~s 
must reach this office not tater than Thurs- 
day noon preceding the day of issue. 
Address all communications and make 
checks paysble to North Shore Breeze, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postoffice. : 
VOLUME 8. Aug. 12, 1910 NuMBER 32 
According to the Metropolitan 
Sewerage Commission, which has 
made its final report to Mayor Gay- 
nor, the health of Manhattan and 
surrounding territory is menaced by 
the continued use of New York har- 
bor as a sewerage outlet for that 
city and other communities along 
the Jersey shore. The commission’s 
studies cover a territory embracing 
about twenty miles around City hall, 
and include some 100 municipalities 
with an aggregate population of 
5,000,000. A warning is sounded to 
the effect that it is possible to so 
saturate the volume of the ineomme 
tide with filth that it will be unable 
topurify itself,and beecomeasouree of 
corruption. Some startling facts are 
given in support of this view, as well 
as some remarkable statemerts re- 
garding the willingness, and even 
persistent efforts of certain com- 
munities, to make conditions worse. 
The report of the commission en- 
forees the importance of watching 
earefully the impurities in the Bos- 
ton harbor, and adopting wise pre- 
vention instead of costly cure. 
We reprint the above from the 
current issue of ‘‘New Boston,”’ be- 
eause it throws some light on the 
situation at Manchester and along 
the North Shore, in the present agi- 
tation for better sewerage conditions. 
Our old familiar friend, ‘‘tons of 
water,’’ got back in yesterday morn- 
ing’s papers from a long vacation. 
The cub reporter’s intimate, ‘‘holo- 
caust,’? was mysteriously missing; 
there is a theory that it was the 
guest at a copy reader’s lynching 
party.—Boston Globe (Thursday). 
How about ‘‘the lurid fiames shot 
upward into the vaults of heaven ?’’: 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
HAND WORK FROM THE INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL 
FOR CRIPPLED AND DEFORMED CHILDREN. 
There have been a number of ad- 
ditions to the articles on sale at Miss 
Kiff’s, 13 Beach street, Manchester, 
from the Sehool for 
Industrial 
Crippled and Deformed Children of 
Boston. Especially has the stock of 
scrap baskets been increased, so that 
there are now many varieties to 
choose from. 
Among the articles which may be 
found for sale are—From the sewing 
department: dainty pincushions, in- 
fants’ dresses, cheesecloth dusters, 
baby pillows, children’s rompers, 
glass towels, iron holders and mats, 
boys’ bloomer suits, baby baskets; 
from the cane department: clothes 
hampers, waste baskets, flower pot 
holders, shirtwaist boxes, fruit and 
flower, baskets, piazza vases, wood 
baskets, hanging baskets, fern pot 
holders; from the woodworking de- 
partment: sewing stands, piazza 
crickets, thread cases, trunk stands, 
sleeve boards, wooden toys. 
Established 1863 
H. P. WOODBURY & SON 
Fine Groceries and Table Delicacies 
HEINZ’S ‘‘LATEST”’: 
Salad Vinegar, Spiced, Ready to use 
at 30c. Bottle 
‘| 123 Hale St. 
BEVERLY, MASS. 
’*Phone 546 or 8651 
