18 
* North Share Brevze 
HERE SRS 
Published every Friday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGH, Editor and Proprietor. 
Telephones: Manchester 137, 132-3. 
Knight Building, Manchester, Mass. 
$2.00 a year; 3 
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Address all communications and make 
checks payable to North Shore Breeze, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
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Volume 8. Sept. 16, 1910. Number 37 
Sept. 17 — 23. 
SUN FULL TIDE 
Rises Sets Aw'M. P.M 
17*8a! 5°25 eo: 2 blonde Je 55 
18 Su. 5 26 syed Uso Ms MU) 10 33 
19 M. § 27 ete Oo Liat 
20 Tu 5 28 5. 47°23) 1140 aa 
21 W. § 29 hai OWA ol WB 12 26 
22NiTh: Nuh 594 Fahl 25 ira ts 
23. Fr. Digs Cyt al 1b “a3 
One of our contemporaries says: 
‘“What’s the matter with Magnolia? 
This question is asked from this 
angle: Since the erection of the 
Curry house some seven or eight 
years ago not one house of conse- 
quence has been built here. At East 
Gloucester some- half dozen high- 
class houses have been erected each 
season during that time. Surely no 
other section of the shore has any- 
thing on Magnolia in the way of nat- 
ural beauty and every factor that 
makes for popularity. Its combina- 
tion of seashore and woodland, road- 
ways, accessibility to the heart of 
the Essex County colony cannot be 
excelled and yet residence building 
lags. On the contrary the hotel in- 
terest increases in importance. What 
would Magnolia be without the 
Oceanside?’’ 
From the above one would infer 
that Magnolia is sagging—that but 
hotel interests Magnolia 
for her 
G. BE. WILLMONTON 
Attorney and Counseilor-at-Law 
| 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
would be a small factor in the 
North Shore. The writer sort of 
laments the fact that in the last 
seven or eight years ‘‘not one house 
of consequence has been built here.’’ 
Good reason, there is not a piece of 
land at Magnoha today on the mar- 
ket. The whole shore front has gone 
into the hands of cottagers who are 
already here and who are so charm- 
ed by the beauties of the place that 
they have purchased every available 
inch of property. Magnolia terri- 
tory is built upon more to the square 
foot than any other part of the 
North Shore. Good reason there 
should be more building at East 
Gloucester—there are twenty-five 
acres of available land there to 
twenty-five feet at Magnolia. Mag- 
nolia has not reached its zenith by 
any means—there will probably be 
many very fine estates built here 
within the next ten years—just as 
soon as some of the old-time cottag- 
ers are willing to part with some of 
the beautiful building sites adjoin- 
ing their large estates so as to share 
the glory of the surroundings with 
others. One thing is sure—there is 
no property waiting around for a 
purchaser, except perhaps some 
standing back from the ocean and 
what many would look upon as ‘‘not 
so desirable.’’ But after all, some 
of the finest estates along the 
North Shore are those standing back 
from the water. Many people like 
such estates better than those on the 
water’s edge. 
Don’t leave cats! This ought to 
be an apropos suggestion, so many 
of our people are taking leave of 
their Shore homes. At one of the 
nearby resorts—Salem Willows— 
signs have been posted by the S. P. 
C. A. giving notice that persons who 
abandon cats are liable to a heavy 
fine, according to the new state law. 
The sign also gives notice that the 
S. P. C. A. will pay a reward for evi- 
dence leading to the conviction of 
any person who abandons eats. 
| Willmonton’s Agency 
OLD SOUTHBLDG., BOSTOR 
SCHOOL AND UNION STS., MANCHESTER 
The War on the Fly. 
When you see a fly buzzing around — 
these days kill him promptly. By 
doing so you will head off the pro- 
duction of 1,728,000 flies due to ar- 
rive by the first of May, 1911. We 
do not know’ positively that that — 
number of flies will come from every ~ 
single buzzer that is allowed to live 
through the balance of this season, 
but when we think of the July and 
August crop we are inelined to be- 
lieve it. Some scientist who is inter- 
ested in flies has been watching the 
little insect and has followed this 
matter of propagation to a econclu- 
sion and the figures printed above 
are the result of his investigation. 
Time was when the fly was called 
the public scavenger and he was 
looked upon with considerable tol- 
eration, but that time is past. Now 
he is the greatest little villain in 
existence except the mosquito. An- 
other scientist who is a good counter, 
and who has been studying the fly, 
says that a bowl of milk exposed to 
the flies for twenty-four hours will 
show that there are something like 
700,000,000 more bacteria in the 
milk than there ought to be. Of 
course, the man, woman or child who 
drinks this milk will swallow the 
700,000,000 bacteria besides the 
other little animals which go natur- 
ally with a bowl of milk which has 
received reasonable care. Then, 
when we think of all the places 
where the fly walks and consider the 
fact that he never wipes his feet un- 
less it is on the pie and other food- 
of mankind, it will be seen that we 
have a better chance of living if we 
can place the fly in the list of the 
dead. <A few fly murders now will 
save the necessity for a wholesale 
slaughter next year. Down with the 
fly! 
Irrigated App'e Orchards 
Grown For Non-residents by 
PROF. GEO. T. POWELL, 
the celebrated orchardist of New 
York state, in the ideal 
APPLE district of 
ROSWELL, NEW MEXICO. 
YEARLY PAYMENTS. Send for 
illustrated booklet, PROF. POW- 
ELL’S report on ROSWELL, and 
full particulars of cost. 
Western Irrigaied Land and Orchard Go., 
No. 47 West 42 St., NEW YORK. 
I NSURANGE OF ALL KINDS 
REAL ESTATE 
Mortgages, Loans, Summer House 
for Rent. Telephone Cars 
