NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
At ‘omni nae Connie 
We have a fresh daily supply at these departments that is indeed 
pleasing to the caretaking housekeeper in her table supply purchasing. 
3ST 
At Bo VERY. 
VERMONT 
BUTTER CREAMERY 
Lake View Print Butter 2 
Lake View Print Butter, unsalted - _ 
This is the very choisest butter that it is possible to purchase. 
Coon Bros.’ 
33<c lb. 
37c Ib. 
S7c Ib; 
English Dairy Cheese 
Sage Cheese 
Swiss Cheese 
Roquefort Cheese 
DEERFOOT CREAM 
2} DEERFOOT CREAM, fine and thick, no charge for jar, 
Cottage Cheese 
Cream Cheese 
Neufchatel 
15¢e jar 
Young American Cheese 
Camembert Cheese, soft and creamy 
eee SBE HE 6 96 
Every known kind of cheece that is popular and marketable can 
be found at our cheese counter. 
Cheese, sharp and snappy 
Best Mild Cheese, a "fine rarebit specialty 
20c |b 
18c lb & 
20c lb 
18clb & 
20¢ lb ‘ 
30c lb & 
45c lb & 
10c each 
25c each & 
10¢ each 
5c each 
js" TWO DELIVERIES WEEKLY IN BEVERLY FARMS AND MANCHESTER. 
{OOBB, BATES & YERXA COMPANY, 
THE BIGGEST, BUSIEST AND BEST CROeeR STORE EAST OF BOSTON. 
TELE PHONE—940. Private Branch eee connec Sarees all ie Pon 
Society Accs. 
It will be a matter of much interest 
among the summer residents to know 
that the North Shore Grill club, so 
successfully launched and _ directed 
through last season by Miss Frances H. 
Stearns, is to be continued the coming 
Beason, An) L.- Rowell, at present 
superintendent of Harvard Union, 
Cambridge, has leased the property and 
will carry it on as an open grill, instead 
of a private club. As is known to some 
extent, probably, Mr. Rowell was stew- 
ard at the Adams House for several 
years. Besides having great executive 
ability, and a knowledge of catering to 
the most epicurean taste, he is exceed- 
‘ingly popular with men and will bring to 
Magnolia the entire support of Harvard 
University as well as all the leading clubs 
of Boston, where he is so well known. 
The North Shore can safely count upon 
seeing great surprises next summer in 
the manner in which Mr. Rowell intends 
to serve the public. ‘The place will 
have a decidedly New York flavor. 
Both chefs, who made such a success 
last year, will be retained. The head 
BeCE: 
aS 
All bills and claims against the Town of 
Manchester should) be presented to the 
Selectmen on or before January 30, 1907, 
for payment before the close of the fiscal 
year. 
SELEOCTMEN OF MANCHESTER. 
waiter comes from Sherry’s. One of 
the features of the season will be the 
garden entertainments, on the beautiful 
velvety lawn adjoining the club house. 
The Vincent club girls, of which 
Miss Hannah Stevenson of Prides is the 
president, is planning on a vaudeville 
show in Jordan hall, Boston, on the 22d 
of this month, for the St Stephen’s 
Kindergarten. Among the well known 
North Shore ladies who are patronesses 
are: Mrs. H. L. Higginson, Mrs. 
Boylston Beal and Mrs. 
Endicott, jr. 
Appeal for China. 
The following is sent by the Central 
Council of the American National Red 
Cross at Washongton: 
Reports from Shanghai lately received 
byothey Red Cross, “tell. of -the- terrible 
devastation along the Grand Canal 
caused by the heavy summer rains. In 
July much of the country was already 
under water from knee-deep and waist- 
deep and in some places the people had 
to wade through water up to their necks. 
West of the Canal what was formerly a 
fertile plain covered with good crops and 
prosperous hamlets is nowa vast lake 
extending 60 li at the narrowest point 
and stretching 100 li out toward the 
southwest. Here and there are the 
groups of cottages which rise above the 
sheet of water and can only be reached 
by boats. The people are in a state of 
absolute destitution, not only their crops, 
but also the reeds which constitute their 
fuel, being destroyed by the floods. 
In a district about two hundred miles 
in length and one hundred miles in 
width on each side of the Grand Canal, 
a total area of forty thousand square 
miles, the crops have been almost totally 
destroyed and in the country beyond 
only partial crops have been saved. It 
is certain that one-half or two-thirds of 
the population of ten or fifteen millions 
of the affected region will be on the 
Mimo. Ga. 
verge of starvation during the winter 
and tens of thousands must perish 
unless help is given. Thousands of 
houses have also been destroyed and 
men, women and children by tens of 
thousands have left their homes to beg 
elsewhere. Some throw their children 
into the water and then commit suicide, 
others are selling their children for 
almost nothing. Farmers are forced to 
sell their work animals to buy food 
and have no wheat to plant next year’s 
crop. Hundreds are already dying from 
famine and fever in their desolate and 
foodless homes. “There isno hope of 
relief before the ripening of the new 
crops next June andthe condition of 
these millions in the flooded country will 
be indescribably awful during the winter. 
‘The need is so urgent that the response 
for aid should be generous and prompt 
to mitigate the sufferings of these strav- 
ing multitudes. 
For the Essex Division of Am. Nat’! 
Red Cross, 
Francis H. Appieron, Pres. 
W. O. CHapman, Treas. 
Louisa P. Lorine, Sec. 
All contributions should be sent to W. 
©. Chapman, Asiatic Nat] Bank, 
Salem, Mass. 
Literary Society. 
At a meeting of the Story High school 
Literary Society Wednesday the follow- 
ing interesting program was carried out: 
Recitation, Pheidippedes(Browing) 
Edward Wheaton 
Composition, Greek Literature Charles Lodge 
Recitation, Close of the Oration on the Crown 
(Demosthenes) Willard Rust 
Recitation, The Victory of Hector Flossie Allen 
Composition, Greek Architecture Alice Blaisdell 
Recitation, Socrates’ Defense (Plato) 
Joseph Floyd 
Recitation, An Honorable Death Preferable to 
an Inglorious Life Alice Hoare 
Recitation, Selection Child’s Harold 
Pilgrimage Minnie Olsen 
Critic, Ethel Jones 
from 
Leave your printing at the Breeze Office. 
