12 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Published every Saturday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor and Proprietor. 
Palsifer’s Block, Manchester, Mass. 
Branch Office: 5 Washington 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. 
All 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. 
Address all communications and make checks paya- 
ble to NorTH SHORE BREEzr, Manchester, Mass. 
_The BREEZE is for sale at all news stands on the 
North Shore. 
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 143-4. 
VOLUME 2. NUMBER 23. 
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1905. 
Rest of 1905 Free 
The Breeze offers to new sub- 
scribers this paper free for the re- 
mainer of 1905. If your name is not 
at present on its mailing list, you can 
get the paper the rest of October, 
November and December without 
cost if you send $1.00 to cover a sub- 
scription for 1906. If you are now 
a subscriber why not have the paper 
sent to some friend? It costs only 
$1.00 for a year to any part of U.S, 
Canada or the Provinces. 
Delightful Fall Weather. 
What a grand month October has 
been thus far! What splendid 
weather! Those of the summer colony 
who have remained on the shore are 
wondering if, after all, the autumn is 
not the best, and the prettiest. 
Hillsides and mountain could hardly 
offer better foliage colorings than that 
with which the North Shore is now 
graced. The beautiful tints of the 
leaves, the enriching air, delightful 
drives, — and all this along the border 
of the ocean, — offers a rare combina- 
tion, and something even more 
beautiful than can be found at the 
mountains. 
The summer season is growing 
longer year by year, it is true, but 
could the large number of our sum- 
.mer friends remain with us into Oc- 
tober we hold no doubt as to the pro- 
longing of the season for weeks and 
weeks. 
Practice 
HON, CURTIS GUILD, JR. 
GUIL 
In voting a man should use discrimi 
» of one party and the P 
Republican Candidates 
TO SAVE THE CHILDREN, 
At the recent convention of the 
Federation of Labor a resolution was pas 
endorsing 
HON. CURTIS GUILD, ur, 
Republican Candidate for 
ae 
Governor, 
for his efforts in behalf of the abolition 
child labor in this country. He was red 
nized as the true friend of labo 
What have the Democratic candidates done to equal this? 
opportunity, or the man whos 
opportuni 
THE TRUE Fh 
= 
Vandalism 
We are all vandals more or less; 
but there is continually cropping out 
in some of us that kind of vandalism 
which makes man appear more like a 
beast than a human being. Some 
time between Saturday afternoon and 
Monday morning of the past week 
some vandals, fur such they are, per- 
petrated such acts at the primary 
school building, now under construc- 
tion, which point clearly to the beast 
in them. What they did will not per 
mit being printed. Among other 
things they plastered one of the walls 
with whitewash, and several men were 
kept busy several hours Monday clean- 
ing up after them. No form of pulr 
ishment is too bad for a man wh? 
perpetrates such acts. We can Se 
how such acts could be done agains! 
private. individuals, but a man thal 
se between the Practice of the members 
her for campaign effect. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
reaching ! 
ctice What They Preach. 
A MODEL MILL TOWN. 
Students of labor conditions have placed 
heir seal of approval upon Hopedale, the mill 
pwn which 
HON. EBEN S. DRAPER, 
Republican Candidate for 
Lieutenant-Governor, 
ind his family have established, and 3000 or 
hore people find work in plenty there, at good 
mages and under the most beautiful and 
eneficent surroundings. 
‘true friend of labor, the man who does 
ing what he would do if he ever had the 
Bes the opportunity P ; 
JF LABOR ARE 
DRAPE 
HON. EBEN S. DRAPER. 
things for labor at every 
would do such things against the town 
which helps support him, and espe- 
cially against an institution which 
gives free education to his children, is 
nothing more than a beast. 
Anderson -— Verr 
Albert Anderson of Magnolia and 
Miss Mary Verr of Boston were 
united in marriage Monday in Boston, 
and have taken up residence in a_cot- 
tage on the Gloucester road. 
Merritt — Wyatt 
A quiet wedding was svlemnized 
last Saturday evening at the residence 
of Rev. Clarence S. Pond, Beverly 
Farms, when Miss~ Bertha Nella 
Wyatt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
George Henry Wyatt, was united in 
marriage with Albert Herbert Mer- 
ritt of Salem. After a short trip 
Mr. and Mrs. Merritt will reside in 
Gloucester. 
Tue BrEEzE—one year, one dollar. 
13 
Republican State Ticket for 1905 
HON. CURTIS GUILD, JR. 
who comes to be the unanimous choice 
of the Republican party of Massachu- 
setts for governor, is a native of Bos- 
ton, where he was born February 2, 
1860. He graduated from Harvard in 
1881, and since that time has been 
active in public life, filling every posi- 
tion with an enthusiasm that stamped 
him as a man of force and fertility of 
resource. In private business life he 
is the editor of the Boston Commercial, 
a leading trade paper of the city. He 
has been lieutenant-governor for three 
years. Gen. Guild is a Mason. 
HON. EBEN S. DRAPER 
the Republican nominee for lieuten- 
ant-governor, is a native of Hopedale, 
where his extensive mill interests are 
located, the date of his birth being 
June 17,1858. He is a. graduate of 
the Institute of Technology, and after 
that school training he took a practical 
course in the machine shops and cotton 
mills of the Hopedale mills. He isa 
director of many corporations and is a 
man of broad business acumen. Dur- 
ing the Spanish war he was active in 
the raising of the $200,000 necessary 
to equip the hospital ship Bay State, 
which did so much good at that time. 
Clark — Stiles 
A quiet home wedding was solemn- 
ized at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. 
Frank J. Stiles, 17 Edwards street, 
Beverly, last Sunday, when their 
daughter, Miss Florence Belle Stiles, 
and Herbert Scott Clark were united 
in marriage. The Rev. C. H. Atkins, 
pastor of the Avenue Methodist 
church, performed the ceremony in 
the presence of the immediate fami- 
ly. The couple was unattended. 
The bride is well and _ popularly - 
known in Beverly, and in Cambridge, 
her former home. The groom is a 
Rockland, Me., man, but for the past 
year and a half he has been head 
pressman at the Beverly Printing 
Company’s office. During his stay 
in Beverly, however, he has made 
many friends. Heisan officer in Bev- 
erly lodge, 105, Knights of Pythias. 
Mr. and Mrs. Clark, after their re- 
turn from a fortnight’s wedding tour, 
will take up their residenct in Beverly. 
Stoddard — Southiasa 
Avon Stoddard of Manchester and 
Miss Margaret Southerland were 
united in marriage in Boston Wednes- 
day. Mr. Stoddard, it will be recalled 
fell from the roof of the Soulis house 
on Lincoln street, Manchester, a year 
ago, and received almost fatal injuries. 
The Breeze, one year, one dollar. 
