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Published every Friday Afternoon by 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE CO. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor. 
Telephones: Manchester 137, 132-3. 
Knight Building, - Manchester, Mass. 
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checks payable to North Shore Breeze 
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Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postoffice. 
THIS PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FORCIGN 
ADVERTISING LY THE 
GENERAL OFFICES 
NEW YORK AND CHICAGO 
BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIiCS 
Volunz 8 Decenber 16, 1910. Number 50 
Dec 17 — Dec. 23. 
SUN FULL TIDE 
Rises Set A M. P. M. 
17 Sa. 7 08 ATS mies LISS 9 
18 Su. 7 08 ae ks P2517. 
19M 7 09 eel pou: 1 09 
20 Tu. 7: 1G Rov la: eS 2 02 
21 W. LAND 45 145i) 2235 2257, 
Pao Toh Dik te otk AM ATS es as 2 Ecker 
23 Fr. Poll ADS 251.4429 Fo52 
COMMUNICATION. 
Magnolia Summer Visitor Hopes 
‘‘No-License’’ Will Now Be 
Properly Enforced. 
Editor North Shore Breeze, 
Dear Sir: Every well-wisher of 
Magnolia who spends his or her 
summer there cannot but feel thank- 
ful at the recent victory of No-Li- 
cense and grateful to those who 
have worked so hard to bring this 
much-desired result about. As an 
experiment the sale of liquors was 
unrestricted last year and the unfor- 
tunate result was a condition of dis- 
quiet and rodyism which made the 
streets of the ‘‘business section’’ not 
only objectionable, but often posi- 
tively unsafe for unattended ladies. 
Those of us who have been coming 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
to. Magnolia for a good many years 
had cause to regret most sincerely 
the lack of quietness and feeling of 
absolute security which was until 
recently its greatest charm. If ‘‘ No- 
License’’ is now. properly enforced 
by the officers of the law, whose 
duty it is to do so, all will again be 
well and Magnolia’s name will be 
once more as fair and sweet as the 
white flower among its woods. 
—P. 
Boston, Dee. 7, 1910. 
Users of season tickets on the B. 
& M. may be interested to learn that 
after Jan. 1, they will be unable to 
procure a receipted rebate from the 
conductor, when they forget to bring 
along their season ticket and are 
required to pay a cash fare. The 
rule regarding the holding of season 
tickets at the station office after the 
date they are ordered will also be 
discontinued. Hereafter tickets must 
be taken on the date they are order- 
ed for. 
Skeleton Found in Ground at Pride’s 
Crossing. 
The skeleton of what was sup- 
posed to be an Indian was dug out 
of the earth at Pride’s Crossing last 
Saturday. One of the Italian labor- 
ers at work at the new mansion be- 
ing built for Mrs. Lucius Manlius 
Sargent was digging a trench for 
the foundation of a terrace wall and 
as he had dug about two feet under- 
ground his pick crushed through a 
white object that later turned out 
to be a skull. Some of the other 
workmen were called and the en- 
tire skeleton of a body, from the 
knees up, was unearthed. The 
arms were crossed upon the breast, 
and the ribs and all the other bones 
were in position, though all fell 
apart as soon as disturbed. The 
teeth were there, and the entire 
skull, though the latter was econsi- 
derably broken by the blow from 
the workman’s pick. 
It is thought the rest of the skele- 
ton was destroyed last winter when 
the main foundations for the house 
were put in. The rest of the bones 
were found just at the edge of the 
trench for the main foundations. 
The bones: were put in a box and 
shipped to Boston, to the office of 
Architect Wales, who has charge of 
the house. Roberts & Hoare of 
Manchester are building the house 
G. E. WILLMONTON 
Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law 
Willmonton’s Agency 
SCHOOL AND UNION STS., MANCHESTER 
_The Escape, Sarah Coughlin; recit., 
OLD SOUTHBLDG., BOSTON 
and W. W. Hoare had the ske 
shipped to the architect. 
It is thought that the skeletor on 
might have been that of an Indian, 
buried there two hundred year 
more ago. Several arrow heads 
were found near the skeleton. Two 
hundred and fifty years ago this 
whole section was thickly settled 
with Indians. The spot where the 
bones were found was only a rod | or ~ 
to from the water. 
or 
1 
Parent-Teacher Association. 
The regular meeting of the Man 
chester Parent-Teacher Association 
will be held in the Price School, 
Wednesday evening, Dee. 21, at 7.45 
o’clock. 
The committee in charge has ar- 
ranged for a ‘‘Health Night’’, and 
different phases of the subject will 
be treated by our local physicians. 
Dr. Blaisdell will talk on ‘‘Local 
conditions; ‘‘Nutritive value of 
Common Foods’”’ will be considered — 
by Dr. Tyler; while Dr. a 
will have for his subject ‘‘ The Child ~ 
and the State’’. 
Miss Laura Carney, the Visiting © 
Nurse, will also be present and all — 
parents will have an opportunity to 
meet her and learn of her work in 
the community. 4 
Musical selections will be a part of 
the program and the evening will — 
close with the usual social hour. 
Literary Society. 
The Literary Society of the Story » 
High School, Manchester, presented — 
the following interesting program at. 
their meeting yesterday: Oral com- — 
position, Myths and Traditions of 
the Indians, Mary Manion; recita- 
tion, The Pilgrim’s Vision, Gertrude 
Ryan; recit., The Pilgrims welcome, 
Mildred Foster; comp., The Story — 
Told by the Waste Basket, Elizabeth 
Merson; recit, Indian Names, Lydia 
Dennis; recit., The Essex County In- 
dians, Irving Baker; violin solo,. 
Flower Song, Arthur Kehoe; comp., — 
The Chippawa Legend, Hazel Se-- 
mons; comp., The Chippawa Indians, _ 
Francis Norie; recit., Hiawatha’s 
Lessons, Margaret McNeary; recit., — 
The Wedding Feast, John Gillis; 
comp., The Indian Dispossessed, Fred 
Jackson. Winthrop Younger, critic. 
A neat line of Xmas ties in pretty 
boxes at Bell’s. 
INSURANGE OF ALL KINDS 
REAL ESTATE d 
Mortgages, Loans, 
for Rent. 
Summer House 
Telephone Con 
