32 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
poeta 
* North Slure freeze e 
Pied see eee | 
Published every Friday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODG#H, 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. 
g@s To insure publication, contributions 
must reach this office not later than Thurs- 
day noon preceding the day of issue. 
Address all communications and make 
checks payable to North Shore Breeze, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postoffice. 
Volume 8. Aug. 19, 1910” Number 33 
Aug. 20— 26 
SUN FULL TIDE 
Rises Sets ena P.M. 
20 Sa. 456 6 39 |10 35 10 57 
54 Sie SA Tae ees 11 43 
22 M. AOS3. ~ 62365;, 22°05 aes 
Eid Rt Pan eae) We ee Pa) 12552 
24. Woe P SD cs 06-3305 1 38 
25 iu seal 6 31 as) Vipera 
26 Fr. iy 630 F) 22555 3 18 
Henry K. Kimball, secretary of 
the Massachusetts fish and game pro- 
tective association, notes in a cir- 
cular just issued, that the principal 
changes in fish and game laws made 
by the last legislature are as follows: 
Upland plover, close season ex- 
tended to July 15, 1915; shooting 
from motor boats, permitted when at 
anchor; deer, one may be killed with 
a shotgun in the five western coun- 
ties from sunrise of third Monday in 
November to sunset of following 
Saturday ; torching for fish in waters 
at Cohasset, Scituate, Duxbury and 
Plymouth, allowed only by ‘* permit’”’ 
from selectmen; pollution of streams 
by waste or refuse of any kind, pro- 
hibited; trout fishing season from 
April 1 to August 1; gray squirrels 
open season October 15 to November 
16; season, limit 15. 
The House-Fly. 
The average person searcely real- 
izes the danger there is in harboring 
the well-known house-fly—if they 
did, they would do more to destroy 
the pest. The government is doing 
its best to educate the people of the 
necessity to keep the house clear of 
them and although the movement is 
young it has already borne good re- 
sults. There are a number of good 
remedies: that of ‘‘Fly-Go’’ seems 
to eradicate them the quickest of 
any and it ean be bought very cheap- 
ly. 
Band Concert Next Thursday. 
The following program has been 
prepared by conductor Missud of the 
Salem Cadet Band for the next con- 
cert in the series to be given on the 
common at Manchester, next Thurs- 
day evening, August 25. Good 
weather will probably bring the 
largest attendance this summer as 
tLees eoneerts seem to have grown 
in popularity with each succeeding 
concert. 
As VE aTe be amr ellemer. 2. se eee se Missud 
DO Waltzes SxMUp OSI astaeee Ma noes eo Bendix 
3. Overture, Poet and Peasant ....Suppe 
4 oolo store COrnebmesegee wile sistas: Selected 
Mr. Nelson Bernier 
. Echoes from Metropolitan Opera- 
ELOUSC Rerretarsueeetiy cr eetchet tases ene eras Tobani 
6. Selection, Merry Minstrels ... Voelker 
7. Duet for Clarinets, Nanine ....Marsol 
Messrs. Schaller and Stoddard 
8. Selection; Old, Dutch: ..c..... Herbert 
9. Intermezzo, The Glow Worm ...Lincke 
105 March 2 Dominica ease sass. Chambers 
Jean Missud, Conductor. 
Special Town Meeting. 
The business of the Special Town 
Meeting at Manchester, Monday 
evening, to hear the report of the 
selectmen relative to the construc- 
tion of the sea wall at West Man- 
chester was disposed of in record 
time. The meeting was called to 
order at two minutes past eight and 
at 8:09 it was dissolved, $2000 havy- 
ing been appropriated in the mean- 
while. 
The articles. of the special war- 
rant were read by Town clerk Jew- 
ett, there being at the time about 12 
voters present. R. C. Allen was 
elected moderator. Chairman Swett 
of the Board of Selectmen presented 
a report in which the board recom- 
mended the construction of a con- 
erete wall on top of the present 
granite wall, the same to be in con- 
formity to that already built along 
the beach at West Manchester sta- 
tion by Lester Leland and other 
property owners. An appropriation 
of $2000 was recommended, also 
that the wall be built by contract. 
W. C. Rust thought this move 
was in the right direction and was 
for the best interests of the town. 
Tle moved that the report of the 
board be accepted and its recom- 
mendations adopted. It was so voted. 
The wall to be built by the town will 
be some 300 feet in length. It will 
start in the centre of the beach and 
will encirele the roadway to the 
property of C. E. Cotting. An en- 
DISEASE CARRIERS 
BEWARE 
OF THE DANGEROUS 
House Fly 
Use every precaution to avoid 
contact with them, if you value 
good health. 
One of the affective means of 
ridding the house of flies is In 
the use of 
“Fly-<Go” 
made by 
PRATT FOOD CO. 
For sale by 
F. W. VARNEY 
Beverly Farms 
Grand Army Fair 
a 
TOWN HALL, MANCHESTER 
Aug. 29—-S8ept. 3 
Anybody wishing to make 
any donation of fancy 
work or articles for the 
booths, tables, etc., may 
leave same with 
MRS. HANNAH TAPPAN, 
Bridge St., Manchester. 
Vaccination Notice 
Parents who contemplate sending chil- 
dren to school in September for the first. 
time are reminded of the statute law gov- 
erning vaccination. No pupil will be ad- 
mitted who cannot present a card or certi- 
ficate from a physician certifying that he 
or she has been successfully vaccinated, or 
giving good and sufficient cause why such 
has not been done. This also applies to 
those intending to enter the kindergarten 
school, 
Per ‘order School Committee, 
; Town of Manchester. 
trance onto the beach will be 10 feet 
wide instead of 16 as under the for- 
mer conditions and provision will be 
made for Glosing this entrance 
during the winter months. 
