24. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Per URE ee aes 
> North Shore A. 
PRUNES ES eNOS 
Published every Friday afternoon by 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE CO. 
Knight Building - Manchester, Mass. 
Boston Office: 
44 Herald Bldg., 171 Tremont St. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor. 
Manchester 137, 182-3. 
3660 Oxford. 
Telephones: 
Boston Telephone: 
Subeription rates: $2.00 a year; — 3 
months (trial) 50 cents. Advertising 
rates on application. 
p@p- To insure publication, contributions 
must reach this office not later than Thurs- 
day noon preceding the day of issue. 
Address all communications and make 
checks payable to North Shore Breeze 
Co., Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postoffice. 
Vol. X July 12, 1912 No. 28 
The Sidewalk Issue at 
Beverly Farms 
The sidewalk issue has at last 
reached a crisis at Beverly Farms. 
The eare and success of the side- 
walks in the neighboring town of 
Manchester are the envy of all in 
Beverly’s Sixth Ward. Like the out- 
skirts of a larger municipality Ward 
6 of Beverly has suffered from 
neglect. It looks now, with the 
united protests of the summer and 
permanent populations that some- 
thing will be done. The board of 
government in Beverly 1s very short- 
sighted in its policy relative to Bev- 
erly Farms, or they would have an- 
ticipated the needs of the ward bet- 
ter. A more liberal policy toward 
its bill-paying ward would be the 
wiser policy for Beverly. Beverly 
Farms may feel like hiring a band 
and burning red lights if they real- 
ly do see the money appropriation 
laid in sidewalks. 
Dr. Fenn. 
The Unitarian society at Man- 
chester was fortunate in hearing 
Dean William W. Fenn of Harvard 
meee Sn en eee 
G. E. WILLMONTON 
ATTORNEY AND 
COUNSELOR AT LAW 
naan nee 
last Sunday, and that he could ad- 
just his time to accept the commit- 
tee’s invitation. Dean Fenn is al- 
ways welcome in Manchester for his 
broad, human sympathies, his clear 
thinking and inspiring address. He 
is a preacher of rare merit and a man 
of enviable powers. 
The Appeal for Beverly Hospital 
The Beverly Hospital has been 
rendering excellent service to the 
entire North Shore and has won an 
enviable name for its humanitarian 
work. The maangement has been 
above reproach and the skill and 
success of its staff of physicians de- 
serves the well-earned reputation. 
The annual appeal for funds, which 
is now being made by the treasurer, 
deserves a liberal response from the 
public along the Shore. 
The Beverly Farms Playground 
The Beverly Farms citizens are in 
debt to the liberal policy of some of 
its friends. The new playground is 
filling a long felt need in the com- 
munity. If the donors reap but a 
part of the joy of giving that the 
young people of Beverly Farms will 
have in using the new grounds, the 
gift will not have been in vain. 
The Country Fair 
All roads will lead to the Country 
Fair at the Montserrat Golf club 
Saturday, July 27th. The Children’s 
Island Sanitarium at Marblehead, 
which will be benefited by the sale, 
is a worthy charity that will appeal 
to the hearts of sympathetic people. 
With the President and the summer 
folk along the shore in attendance 
the fair will be an event of the sea- 
son. May the gods be propitious and 
grant a cool, pleasant day ;—the 
efficient managers helped by all will 
do the rest. 
A Public Spirited Corporation 
No industrial enterprise in the 
last decade has given better evi- 
dence to the spirit of publie service 
than the telephone company. The 
details of the business are intricate 
and the opportunities for inconven- 
lence and misunderstanding are 
many. The ordinary citizen rarely 
considers the care entailed in the 
success of the simplest call. The 
company is to be congratulated up- 
on the success achieved recently in 
WILLMONTON’S AGENCY 
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS 
SCHOGL AND UNION ST'S, MANCHESTER 
OLB SOUTH B'LOG, BOSTON 
‘‘eutting over’’ from the old to the 
new exchange and the new system in 
Manchester. 
A Good Work. 
The additional church service in 
Seandinavian, established by the 
church at Beverly Farms, reveals in 
another way the cosmopolitan char- 
acter of the North Shore. The hearti- 
ness with which these Seandinavian 
people from Beverly Farms to Mag- 
nolia have weleomed the new service 
for them bespeaks its success and in- 
dicates its need. 
The Recall of Judges 
What a pity that a United States 
judge should so far neglect his hon- 
orable duty and fail in judicial 
ethics as to make an impeachment 
necessary! It is a splendid tribute 
to our government that that sort of 
thing is intolerable in public life and 
incidentally gives actual evidence of 
a real ‘‘recall of judges.’’ 
The ‘‘mature’’ judgements of the 
deliberate English court does not 
differ, in the essential facets, from 
the findings of the so-called ‘‘ crude, 
irregular trial’? by the eongression- 
al committee. The findings of the 
English courts are unvarnished trib- 
utes to the expeditiousness and just- 
ness of our national investigation. - 
The Prohibitionists are consider- 
ing the advisability of changing 
their party designation to Progres- 
sive. What will T. R. do? Shall we 
have two Progressive parties, the 
one ‘‘wet,’’ the other ‘‘dry.”’ 
Harvard University continues its 
efficient public service in the cause 
of education during the summer, 
The interesting experiment of con- 
ducting a summer college has be- 
come a feature in the modern edu- 
catonal system. 
The New England Resorter has 
found its place. It has a field of 
its own. The July edition main- 
tains the high order of the original 
issue. : 
The picnic season is on in force. 
What blessings Tuck’s Point affords. 
Can, you name the candidates for 
vice-presidency ? - 
SUMMER HOUSES FOR 
RENT. 
MORTCACES -- LOANS 
TEL. CONN. 
