14 
PV arth Shure Zireez f 
Published every Friday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor and Proprietor. 
Telephones: Manchester 137, 132-3. 
Knight Building, - Manchester, Mass. 
@ Subscription Rates: $1,00 a year; 3 months 
(trial) 25 cate: Advertising Rate Card on 
application. 
To insure publication, contributions must 
reach this office not later than Thursday noon 
preceding the day of issue. 
Address all communications and make 
checks payable to NorTH SHORE BREEZE, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postoffice. 
——————— 
VOLUME 6. Nov. 13, 1908 NuMBER 46 
Nov. 14—20. 
SUN FULL TIDE 
Rises Sets | aA. M. P.M. 
14 Sa. 6 34 4 23 3 20 3 35 
15 Su. 6 36 4°73 4 10 4 25 
16 M. 6 37 4 22 5 05 yao 
17 Aus 2638 4 21 5 55 6 15 
18 W. 6-39 4 20 6 47 We 
19 Th. 6 40 AeA9 71935 ZuS5 
20 Fr. 6 42 4 19 8 20 8 41 
Sratistics show that of every million 
people 800 are blind—and the other 
999,200 cannot see their own faults. 
Tue Beverly Board of Aldermen ap- 
propriated $1000 for moth extermination 
this week. This is a question which 
must be brought before Manchester cit- 
izens soon, —moth extermination. There 
is need of an additional appropriation be- 
fore the work can be carried on to any 
great extent. 
** Wuart constitutes a day’s_ work?’’ 
We figure it out that it depends altogeth- 
eron your occuption. If you lay brick, 
eight hours; if you keep house, sixteen 
hours; if you preach the gospel, two 
hours; if you are a porter ina sleeping 
car, twenty hours; if you serve the goy- 
ernment, one hour; and if you are a 
newspaper man, twenty-four hours. 
GLOUCESTER has a new city charter, 
and now Beverly comes forward with 
INSURANGE OF ALL KINDS 
Best Companies Lowest Rates 
School and Union Streets 
Manchester i Massachusetts 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
ideas along the same line. There is a 
movement on foot among business men 
and leading citizens looking forward to 
the revision of the present city charter. 
Gloucester’s new charter provides for a 
mayor and four alderman-at-large, which 
is practically a return to the old form of 
town government, with five selectmen. 
GeorcE C. Fairbanks, editor of the 
Natick Bulletin, was one of the success- 
ful candidates at the recent election, 
winning out on a republican ticket for 
the House in a district which had gone 
democratic for a number of years. Mr. 
Fairbanks carried ona clean campaign 
throughout and as a result of his system- 
atic canvas the largest vote in the history 
of Natick was out,---9245 per cent. of 
the total registration. Mr. Fairbanks 
sent out a campaign advertisement which 
was quite unique, and which won him 
lots of votes. It was in the shape of a 
souvenir postal card, showing the square 
in Natick. Drawn into the view, very 
artistically, were airships of all styles, 
sight-seeing autos, elevated railway, sub- 
way entrance for trains to New York, 
etc., etc., with the very pertinent ques- 
tion printed across the top of card 
“Does Natick expect all this of Repre- 
sentative Fairbanks?’’ 
Ovr attention has been called to an 
article which appeared as an editorial in 
one of the Boston papers recently. The 
substance of the article was an account 
of a visit made by a person to several 
city churches on a Sunday evening and 
the record of attendance which was there 
seen, few persons listening to the Gospel 
message as proclaimed from the pulpits, 
except at a Salvation Army street service 
where the band and other attractions 
served as a drawing card; the conclus- 
ion being that a grand union service of 
all the churches on a Sunday evening 
(especially ‘in small towns) was the 
means to be applied to revive some of 
our half dead churches. 
We do not hesitate to suggest this plan 
to our home churches,---here in Man- 
chester,——as one instinctively feels mure 
at ease and derives more uplift spiritually 
when surrounded by those who are ‘‘ of 
one accord in one place;’’ certainly 
———E 
ITPPAYS, 
From the Chicago Record-Hera/d. 
When the dimpled baby’s hungry, what does 
the baby do? 
It doesn’t lie serenely and merely sweetly coo; 
The hungry baby bellows with all its little 
might 
Till someone gives it something to curb its 
appetite. 
The infant with the bottle which stills its fretful 
cries 
A lesson plainly teaches: It pays to advertise. 
The lamb lost on the hillside when darkness 
closes round 
Stands not in silence trembling and waiting to 
be found; 
Its plaintive bleating echoes across the vales and 
meads 
Until the shepherd hears it, and, hearing, kindly 
heeds, 
And when its fears are ended, as on its breast it 
lies 
The lamb has made this patent: It pays to ad- 
vertise. 
The fair and gentle maiden who loves the bash- 
ful boy 
Assumes when in his presence a manner that is 
coy; 
She binayes and she trembles till he perceives at 
ast, 
And clasps her closely to him and gladly holds 
her fast, 
And as he bends to kiss her and as she serenely 
sighs, 
This fact is demonstrated: 
tise. 
It pays to adver- 
ministers would try to do their best when 
the audience gave evidence of increased 
numbers in attendance; more attention 
on the part of the hearers would be giv- 
en the expounding of the Word in talk, 
address orsermon. Good singing is one 
of the things necessary for a successful 
union service. 
New Directory Out. 
The 1909 directory of Gloucester, in- 
cluding a directory also of the towns of 
Manchester, Essex and Rockport, came 
out the past week and a copy reached 
our office a few days ago. 
The book is well gotten up and is an 
improvement in many respects over pre- 
vious editions. There are 15,854 
names in the volume, including 12,002 
under Gloucester, 1250 under Manches- 
ter, 636 Essex, and 1966 Rockport. 
Letters remaining unclaimed at Manchester, 
Mass., P. O. for week ending Nov. 7. Miss 
Josephine C Ayer, Frank D Allen, Miss Sadie 
L Atwood Miss Rose Allen, Miss Annie J 
Blakey Wm H Dogherty, Mrs Everett E 
Gager, Chas Guimelli, Miss Sarah Hazard, 
Mlle Isabelle Le Genche, Miss Effie M Lane, 
Miss M Mercer, Miss Marion. Orcott, Miss 
Isabel Paul, Wm _ Roberts, Joseph Stedman, 
John Stone, Miss Lucy D Schammaker. 
SAMUEL L. WHEATON, Postmaster. 
Telephone Connection 
GEO. E. WILLMONTON 
REAL ESTATE 
Justice of the Peace, Notary Public 
Mortgages, Loans, 
Old South Blidg., Boston 
aw 
