22 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
a ET EEG | 
P. LATORELLA 
Hairdressing Parlor 
Run under stricty sanitary conditions 
P. 0. Block 73,7555". Manchester 
Dutch Clips for Children a Specialty. Tel. 137-M 
——————————_—_—_————— 
MANCHESTER 
The contract for the filling of the 
pond at Rosedale cemetery has bees 
awarded to Semons & Littlefield for 
$971.13, they being nearly $100 lower 
than any of the other three bidders. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
At the regular meeting of the 
Brotherhood in the Baptist church 
vestry on Monday evening, June 5, 
the speaker will be the Rev. W. B. 
.vhitney, chaplain of the state prison 
at Charlestown. His lecture, which 
will be illustrated, will be relative to 
the prison work. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
Sinclair Kennedy of Brookline will 
be the speaker at the Manchester 
Brotherhood meeting next Monday 
evening in the Baptist vestry. Mr. 
Kennedy, who was at Plattsburg last 
summer, will deliver an illustrated 
lecture on “The Plattsburg Idea.” 
His talk will be illustrated by 60 
slides. Many members of the 
3rotherhood are interested to know 
of the Plattsburg camp and were dis- 
appointed when at a recent meeting 
the speaker was unable through lack 
of time to discuss fully the Plattsburg 
plan. All men are invited to attend 
and it is expected that there will be a 
good attendance. 
MANCHESTER BROTHERHOOD. 
The annual concert of the Man- 
chester Brotherhood will be held in 
Town hall, Wednesday evening, May 
17. The entertainers will be the 
Lafayette Male Quartet of Boston, 
accompanied by a reader. ‘The quartet 
is the one which furnished such a 
splendid entertainment for the guest 
night of the Friendship circle recent- 
ly. The program for the Brother- 
hood entertainment will be entirely 
new and a new reader will be brought 
with the singers. Tickets for the en- 
tertainment will be on sale at the drug 
stores at 25 cents. 
50-Rip—E Books N&arty GONE. 
The supply of 50-ride books to Bos- 
ton which were purchased in large 
numbers by ticket agencies and others 
about a year ago when the books were 
abolished by the Boston & Maine, is 
rapidly becoming exhausted. Al- 
though hundreds of. these - ticket 
books were sold, there are but few 
left. 
In March, 1915, the receipts at the 
Manchester railroad office were $9750 
— 
May 12, 1916. 
WwW. B. Calderwood 
Successor to DAVID FENTON CO. 
Builder of Yachts, Launches and Tenders 
Paints, Oils, Varnish, Cordage, Oars, and all kinds of 
Marine Hardware constantly on hand 
Marine Railways, Yacht and Boat Repairing of every description 
Boats STORED FOR THE WINTER AT OWNERS’ Risk IN CASE OF FIRE 
ELEPHONES 
ay 
Manchester, Mass. office 254--Res. 241-W 
as compared with $2400 in a normal 
month, showing how great was the 
demand for tickets. 
The time is near when passengers 
to Boston will be obliged to purchase 
their tickets at the railroad office and 
pay a few cents more than is now be- 
ing charged by the ticket agents. 
Frank W. Bell purchased 260 tickets 
just before they were abolished at a 
cost of $19.65 a ticket,—a total of 
over $5000. He had about 4o left this 
week, and they are going fast. 
Mock TRIAL, 
Members of the Christian En- 
deavor society enjoyed a mock trial 
in the Chapel, Manchester, on Satur- 
day evening, about thirty being pres- 
John Bohaker 
ent to hear the trial. 
answered an indictment charging him 
with the theft of an automobile. It 
was also charged that in the prog- 
ress of a joy-ride the car was wreck- 
ed. Grafton Owens was the prose- 
cuting attorney and Abbott Foster 
defended the accused. Rev. Charles 
A. Hatch acted as judge. Following 
the examination of a number of: wit- 
nesses who presented amusing and 
conflicting evidence the case went to 
the jury composed of the following: 
Mrs. Charles ‘A. Hatch, Misses Doris 
Knoerr, Hattie Pike, Helen Beaton, 
Ruth Brown and Ruth Olsen. — Sid- 
ney. Peters, attired as a policeman- 
preserved order in the court-roorn. 
After a lengthy deliberation the jury 
reported a verdict of not guilty. 
Two ladies—each with her child— 
visited the Chicago Art Museum. As 
they passed the “Winged Victory” the 
little boy exclaimed, “Huh! She ain’t 
got no head.” “Sh!” the horrified 
little girl replied. “That’s Art—she 
don’t need none!”—Harper’s Maga- 
sine. 
While Jane, the new maid, was 
taking her first lesson on arranging 
the dining-table, some one in the base- 
ment kitchen put something upon the 
dumb-waiter: below. ‘“What’s ‘thet 
noise?” asked Jane, quickly. “Why, 
that’s the dumb-waiter,” responded 
MINIATURE ALMANAC 
Week beginning Friday, May 12. 
Sun Light High Tide 
Day Rises’ Sets, Auto A.,M:: P.M: 
Wri /12'6 -4.26- ~ 6,55" 7.25 ~~ 60245 36.52 
Sat 13°" 4:25 79 6.56. "7626" = (lS aiete 
Sun 14 4,24 6.57 Tod Oe OF meroeot 
Mon 524.23" 96/58" = 7.282 *9: 9.19 
MWe LG e420 6 D9 7. 20m Ome keut 
Wed 1 = 4a meee 7.30 10.40 . 10.55 
Mh 18s 4220 er OL = ell 3 0 eeelelere 
Printing 
that will represent your 
business, promptly and 
accurately done at the 
Breeze Office 
Manchester, Mass. 
her mistress. “Well,” said Jane, “he’s 
a-scratchin’ to git out.’—Collier’s. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
“T understand,” said Mrs. Twick- 
embury, “that Germany has invented 
a new and very powerful expletive.’ 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adz. 
Fresh air, food, rest—these three 
conbat tuberculosis. 
