14 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
| peareepea ar ea 
e North Slure frvrze ¢ 
NERY 9, RE | 
Published every Friday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, 
Telephones: Manchester 187, 132-3. 
Knight Building, - Manchester, Mass. 
Subscription Rates; $1.00 a year; 3 months 
(trial) 25 cents. Advertising Rate Card on 
application. 
To insure publication, contributions must 
reach this oflice not later than Thursday noon 
preceding the day of issue. 
Address all communications and make 
checks payable to NorrH SHORE BREEZE, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postoftice. 
VOLUME 6. Oct. 30, 1908 NuMBER 44 
Oct. 31—Nov. 6. 
SUN FULL TIDE 
Rises Sets | A. M. P. M. 
31 Sa. 6 17 4-39 31-0 eye sil 
1 St: 6 18 4 38 4 10 4 33 
2M. 6 19 4 37 5 10 5a35 
8 Cu. 6 20 4°35 6 15 6 45 
4W. 6°22 4 34 7 15 7 45 
S$ “Ph: 6°23 4 33 Ser5 8 45 
6 Fr. 6 24 4 32 Sei, 9585 
THE voter’s thought on Nov. 3 should 
be ‘‘ My Country, ’ Tis of Thee!’’ 
THE man who votes on election day 
will not have to apologize to his con- 
science, whatever may be the election 
outcome. 
How canaman read Daniel Web- 
ster’s panegyric on Massachusetts and 
then neglect to cast a vote for her high- 
est interests? 
BEVERLY seemed to have been up 
against hard luck again Monday evening 
in the matter of having a campaign 
parade. Twice a big event has been 
planned, and each time the weather man 
has turned on the water and broke it up. 
An exchange suggests that ‘‘the 
clergy of the state couldn’t do better. on 
the Sunday before election than to give 
a little hint to the men in their congre- 
gations about their civic duty.”? We 
INSURANGE OF ALL KINDS 
Best Companies Lowest Rates 
School and Union Streets 
Manchester i Massachusetts 
Editor and Proprietor. 
GEO. E. WILLMONTON 
would refer our readers to an excellent 
sermon on our “‘ civic duty,’’ by Rev. 
L. H. Ruge of Manchester in this issue 
of the Breeze. 
Monpay saw the end of the lung dry 
spell, which has held the whole country 
in its grasp for weeks. The rain was 
especially grateful down here, where the 
summer residents spend hundreds of 
dollars annually on trees, hedges, out- 
door plants, etc., which were beginning 
to feel the effects of the dry weather 
badly. 
rious fires round about us, although they 
have raged through Maine and other 
New England states, and through the 
‘The damage to standing timber 
has been great, villages have burned and 
in several .cases lives have been lost. 
Happily there have been no se- 
west. 
With the closing of “‘summer’’ re- 
sidences and the consequent moving of 
the owners back to the city, the little 
matter of change of address is sometimes 
overlooked in the hurry and bustle in- 
cident to removal. 
As soon as a subscriber misses his pa- 
per he should notify the office at once, 
and the list will be corrected and the 
trouble remedied. . The editor is desir- 
ous that no subscriber miss a single issue, 
and every effort is made to keep the list 
correct, but accidents are bound to occur, - 
Any- 
one who does not receive a Breeze when 
itis due can have it by notifying the 
office. 
The Breeze is now in its fifth year. 
Think of it! We’re nearly six, in good 
health and growing all the time, thank 
you. And right here let us whisper 
something—-just a hint: ‘There are big 
things in store for the subscribers the 
coming year. We feel justified in say- 
ing that the Breeze is a great deal better 
than the average weekly—we feel con- 
fident in adding that it is going to be bet- 
ter still. No one can appreciate the task 
of getting out a paper the size and qual- 
ity of this one unless they have had a 
similar experience. Our field is not 
large, our facilities are limited, but we 
are constantly adding new material, new 
ideas and studying new plans to please 
our subscribers. That they appreciate 
HON. EBEN S. DRAPER 
OF HOPEDALE 
Republican Candidate for Governor 
it we are assured by the addition of new 
names from time to time, and the con- 
stant renewal of old ones. 
And in this connection we are making 
the same offer we have made the past 
four years to all NEW SUBSCRIBERS: 
The Breeze free for the next two months. 
To all new subscribers between Novem- 
ber land January 1, 1909, the paper 
will be sent free until the first of the 
year,---that is, all subscriptions received 
from now until the first of the year, will 
be good until January 1, 1910. 
NOW! 
and now and thena paper misses. 
Begin 
Legal 
Advertising 
- Instruct your attorney to have 
your probate and administrator’s 
notices and other legal notices pub- 
lished in the 
North Shore Breeze 
Manchester, Mass. 
Breeze advertising pavs 
REAL ESTATE 
Justice of the Peace, Notary Public 
Mortgages, Loans, 
Telephone Connection Old South Bidg., Boston 
