16 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SEIS 0 ARE 2 MAE SET 
© North Shure Breeze | 
ee ees 
Published every Friday Afternoon by 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE CO. 
J. ALEX, LODGE, Editor. 
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. 
gee 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 
Co., Manchester, Mass. © 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass,, Postoffice. 
THIS PAPC? REPRESENTCD FOR FORCIGN 
ADVERTISING LY THE 
pAseenicwl 
GENERAL OFFICES 
NEW YORK AND CHICAGO 
BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITICS 
Volume 8 December 2, 1910 Number 48 
Dec 3 — Dec. 9. 
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As work progresses on the new 
road at Manchester, connecting 
Beach and Sea streets, the question 
naturally arises. as to what name 
is to be given to the new street. This 
matter will probably 
the next March meeting for the de- 
cision of the voters. 
Might we suggest that Manchester 
already has short streets 
and names to remember, and if we 
could get along at this time without 
come before 
enough 
adding more to the directory, it 
would be well. 
Those who are familiar with the 
location of the new street know that 
its easterly end joins with Sea street, 
at the point where Masconomo street 
starts. The new street very natural- 
ly merges into Sea street and leads 
on to the Brownland cottages, ete. 
The extention of Masconomo street 
very naturally merges into the other 
section of the present Sea street. 
As a means of avoiding a new 
name, this has been suggested : 
Let the new street, beginning at 
its junction with Beach st., be the 
beginning of Sea street. 
Let the section of the present Sea 
street starting at the junction of 
Masconomo street, and extending to 
Washington street, be known as the 
continuation of Masconomo street. 
If this could be done it would do 
away with the necessity of naming 
the new street. Masconomo street 
would then start at Washington and 
Summer streets and extend to 
Smith’s Point, and Sea street would 
start on Beach street, opposite the 
easterly end of Masconomo Park 
and extend to Brownland cottages 
and the MeMillan estate,—the two 
streets crossing at the present junc- 
tion of Masconomo and Sea streets. 
New England, both as a summer 
and winter resort, is to be boomed 
by the publicity department of the 
three merged railroads, —New York, 
New Haven & Hartford,theBoston 
& Maine and Maine Central. 
The resort business of New Eng- 
land attracts a multitude of tour- 
ists, travelers and vacationists from 
every part of the United States. 
These combined railroads in their 
new publicity department will ex- 
amine into the needs and _possibili- 
ties of the public and help build up 
the possibilities of this great vaca- 
tion land. 
All inconveniences of travel are to 
be eliminated through the endeavor 
to improve the train service. 
Sixty million dollars was reported 
as the proceeds from the New Eng- 
land resort business last season ‘and 
G. E. WILLMONTON .. 
Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law 
ed effort. ea 
There is a vast and beautiful field 
also for New England as a winter. 
resort. a 
Along the North Shore we. ‘see. P 
more and more of the so-called — 
“‘summer residents’ living among — 
us in winter. Where there were five x 
or six families keeping their estates: 3 
open all winter ten years ago, there. Be: 
are today, at Manchester, Magnolia, — 
along the Beverly shore, and at 
Hamilton and Wenham, in the yi-~ 
cinity of thirty estates kept open 
all winter. If this same inerease 
is met in the next ten years it will 
mean much for this locality. — 
And what is true of the North 
Shore will be true of other New 
England resorts. Good railroad 
service will be one of the chief 
means of developing this business, 
and we hope to see the railroads un- — 
der the presidency of Mr. Mellen 
carry this to a successful completion. — 
vets era 
There is not a worthy cause today _ 
of any kind that is not dependent in — 
a large degree on the newspapers for — 
its very existence. Shut off’ the 
printing press and the publiéity and 
assistance it gives to the church, the — 
school, the reform movements, the — 
industrial enterprises, the social or- — 
ganizations, the fraternal societies 
and every other agency of progress 
and development and we should 
have a nation of people groping in — 
darkness, feeling feebly for each 
other’s hand and trying to reach a 
common understanding by slow and 
painful effort, with snail-like pro- — 
gress and infinitesimal results. — 
By means of the newspaper there 
are influences brought to bear. that 
could not-be reached in any other 
manner that would never have even ~ 
been known to be in existence but 
for the publicity given the idea by 
the newspaper: If a powerful factor 
and a most useful one in. building 
sone.” | Willmonton’ s Agency 
SCHOOL AND UNION STS., MANCHESTER 
OLD SOUTHBLDG., BOSTON 
INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS 
REAL ESTATE ie 
‘Mortgages, Loans, Summer House 
for Rent. — Con 
Ey pL 
