16 BETO. Cy ee AE 
Se On he 
Magnolia Branch of The Tndian Store Boston, Mass. 
Now at the “APPLE TREE COTTAGE” the red cottage just off Fuller St., 2 or 3 
houses South of Magnolia Post Office 
INDIAN BASKETS, MOCCASSINS, ETC., TOYS AND GAMES, CURIOS, POTTERY. 
THE FAMOUS CURACAO HATS. 
090000000000 0000000000000000 
EK. L. 
AN TI 
Flint 
Bought and Sold—Restoring 
13 Church St., Salem, Mass. 
$090090000000000000000000000 000000000000000000000000000000 
Correspondence 
6 Gia. Gp SE aD 
While our columns are always open for the 
discussion of any relevant subject, we do not 
necessarily indorse the opinions of con- 
tributors. 
Correspondents will please give their names 
—not necessarily fur publication, but as a 
guarantee of good faith. 
Editor North Shore Breeze, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Dear Sir:— The Beverly Farms 
branch of the Beverly Improvement 
Society, of which I am a member, 
have deputed me to call your at- 
tention to the condition of the trees 
on the puble streets, and on private 
estates, infested as they are with 
nests of the gypsy moth and other 
insect pests. 
The gypsy moth nests are easily 
removed by the use of a brush at 
the end of a long pole, the brush 
having first been dipped in Creosote 
or even kerosene. <A ladder and a 
stout heart to climb will enable one 
to reach the most distant, and now 
is the accepted time, before the 
trees become covered with snow and 
ice. 
The brown-tail nests are on the 
extremity of the branches, easily 
seen and easily cut off by a pair of 
shears at the end of a long pole. 
When they drop to the ground they 
should be immediately burned. All 
burlaps or loose bark should be re- 
moved since they only form shelter 
for insects. 
The Leopard Moth, which it will 
be remembered destroyed so many 
beautiful elms in Cambridge, has 
made its appearance in the oak 
trees here. This insect bores a hole 
in the main trunk or in the large 
branches, showing its presence by 
the sawdust near the hole or on the 
ground beneath it. This borer can 
ae 
: 
often be killed with a wire following 
its track, but to make sure, it is well 
to inject with a small syringe Car- 
bon Bi-Sulphide, obtainable from 
any druggist, taking care to after- 
wards cover the mouth of the hole 
with putty or some elastic substance. 
With this treatment and left to its 
own reflections, the borer will cease 
from troubling and will soon be at 
rest. 
Let every citizen carefully scan 
the trees in front of his home, on 
his avenue or in his back yard where 
he will find that seeing is believing 
and perhaps he will add to his ‘‘ Now 
I lay me down to sleep’’ the wish 
that he may be granted the will and 
energy to enable himself, with the 
aid of the constituted authorities to 
rid this part of the world of its in- 
sect enemies. 
Yours truly, = - 
CHARLES L. PEIRSON. 
Pride’s Crossing, Sept. 14, 1911. 
An Appeal. 
The Breeze has been asked to 
make a little appeal for Robert 
Buckman, 23 years old, who is one 
of the first known infantile paraly- 
sis cases in this part of the country. 
At the time he was smitten, Robbie 
was 11 years old. He was in the 
Children’s hospital in Boston for a 
long time, being the son of a widow, 
who has long since spent the small 
inheritance she had on him in a vain 
endeavor to help him. A _ friend 
writes to the Breeze that she pur- 
chased crutches so that he could get 
to the railroad station from his home 
in Boston, and he learned telegra- 
phy. He was able to work in the 
freight office until bis condition has 
now reached a critical stage. Tlis 
leg is withered so that it drags 
along. An eminent physician has 
told him that it must be eR ch 
BREEZE 
and an artificial limb _ substituted. 
This will save his health and very 
likely his life, which is needed for 
the sake of his widowed mother. 
‘‘He is one of the most gentle and 
withal ambitious boys I have ever 
met and it seems a pity that he 
should not get this aid. He is a true 
American, his mother, Martha Sher- 
man, is a great grand daughter of 
Roger Sherman, a signer of the Dee- 
laration of Independence and at one 
time governor of Connecticut,’’ 
writes a friend, who heads a sub- 
seription list with $20.00 and $10.00 
from another friend. We have on 
the subscription list $30.00 to help 
this young man. Who else will 
help? Subscriptions will be aec- 
knowledged in the Breeze. 
MAGNOLIA HOTELS. . 
W. S. Warren, manager of the 
Oceanside, is planning on a gunning 
and fishing trip in the Maine woods 
soon after the close of the house. 
After the annual business meeting 
of the directors of the Oceanside 
corporation, this fall he plans to go 
to his ranch in the west, for a pro- 
longed stay. 
Joseph Nelson, the room clerk at 
the Oceanside, returns to New York 
after the hotel closes, where he will 
be associated with one of the New 
York hotels for the winter. Harry 
Loud, the head bookkeeper will go 
to Palm Beach for the winter, where 
he has been for several years. Geo. 
P. Bell, head front clerk at the 
Oceanside for the past five years, 
will return to the Hotel Raymond, 
at Pasadena, Cal., where he was 
head front clerk last winter. 
W. B. Holland of Boston, who has 
been at Magnolia this summer asso- 
ciated with the brokerage office of 
W. C. Langley & Co., at the Ocean- 
side, has returned to the Boston 
office of the same company. 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
President Taft left the South Sta- 
tion at 7.35 today on his 13,000-mile 
tour of the country. He occupied 
the private car ‘‘Tdeal,’’ which is 
equipped with all up-to-date con- 
veniences. The route will take the 
President in 40 states in 45 days. 
oOo909 
Mr. and Mrs. John Bowler of 
High Cliff lodge, Bass Rocks, are en- 
tertaining Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. 
Bowler of Amsterdam, N. Y., and 
Dr. and Mrs. George M. Albee of 
Worcester. 
oOo°O 4 
Miss Clara Winthrop has returned 
from a trip to Europe and is with 
her mother at West Manchester. 
icy > - 
