(o3) 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
TOWN OF MANCHESTER 
Assessors’ Notice 
Pursuant to the provisions of Sec. 
41, of Part 1 of Chapter 490 of the 
Acts of 1909, all persons, firms and 
corporations, domestic or foreign, 
subject to taxation in the town of 
Manchester are hereby notified and 
required to bring in to the Assess- 
ors of said Town 
ON OR BEFORE THE 
[5th DAY of MAY NEXT 
in case of residents, true lists of all 
their polls and estates, both real 
and personal (not exempt by law 
from taxation), of which they were 
possessed on the first day of April 
in the current year, and in ease of 
non-residents and foreign corpora- 
tions, true lists of all their estate, 
both real and personal, in said 
town of Manchester (not exempt 
from taxation) which lists must be 
verified by oath, as required by 
Sec. 43 of said Part 1. 
Under the provisions of Section 
42 of said Part 1, as amended by 
Chapter 515, Acts of 1909, the 
above-mentioned lists must be in 
form prescribed by the Tax Com- 
missioner of the Commonwealth. 
These blank forms may be had 
at the Assessors’ Office, or will be 
mailed to any address upon appli- 
cation. 
Section 45 of Part 1 of Chap- 
ter 490, Acts of 1909. 
A mortgagor or mortgagee of 
real estate may bring in to the ass- 
sessors of the city or town in which 
it lies, within the time prescribed 
by the notice under Sect. 41, a 
statement under oath of the amount 
secured thereon or on each separate 
parcel thereof, with the name and 
residence of every holder of an in- 
Kind Lady (to applicant)—I am 
sure you would learn to love my 
children. 
Nurse—What wages do you pay? 
Kind Lady— Twenty dollars a 
month. 
Nurse—I am afraid, ma’am, I 
could only be gentle with them at 
that price—Tid-Bits. 
{) 
terest therein as mortgagor or mort- 
gagee. If such property is situated 
in two or more places, or if a re- 
corded mortgage includes two or 
more estates or parts of an estate as 
security for one sum, such state- 
ment shall include an estimate of 
the interest of the mortgagee in 
each estate or part of an estate. The 
assessors shall, from such statement 
or otherwise, ascertain the propor- 
tionate interests of the mortgagor 
or mortgagee respectively in said 
estates, and shall assess the same 
accordingly. If, in any year, such 
statement is not brought in, the 
tax for that year on such real es- 
tate shall not be invalid merely for 
the reason that the interest of the 
mortgagee therein has not been ass- 
essed to him. 
In accordance with Section 41 
aforesaid, all persons and ecorpora- 
tions are hereby required to bring 
in to the assessors, on or before the 
fifteenth day of May next, true lists 
of all real and _ personal _ es- 
tate held by them, respectively, for 
literary, temperance, benevolent, 
charitable or scientific purposes on 
the first day of April, in the current 
year, together with statements of 
the amounts of all receipts and ex- 
penditures for said purposes during 
the year next preceding said first 
day of April; such lists and state- 
ments to be in accordance 
blanks furnished by the Tax Com- 
missioner. E 
EDWARD 8S. KNIGHT, 
WALTER R. BELL, 
FRANK G. CHEEVER, 
Assessors of Manchester, Mass. 
April 1, 1914 
Tramp—You know the sayin’, 
mum: “He that giveth to the poor 
lendeth to the Lord.” 
Mrs. Subbubs— Very true. And 
since you speak of proverbs, I’ll re- ~ 
fer you to another old saw. 
Tramp—Which one is that, mum? 
Mrs. Subbubs—The one back in 
the wood shed. 
with . 
HEARING. 
A hearing will be held at the office 
of the Board of Selectmen on Tues- 
day evening, May 19, 1914, at 7.30 
o’clock, on petition of Heath Broth- 
ers of Manchester to maintain a fish 
weir in tide water off the westerly 
side of Kettle Island for a term of 
five years. 
WALTER R. BELL, 
GEORGE R. DEAN, 
FRANK G. CHEEVER, 
Selectmen of Manchester. 
Mary ons alone 
‘‘Bringing Up Father.’’ 
In ‘‘Bringing up Father,’ the lat- 
est singing and dancing comedy, 
which is to be the next attraction 
at the Empire Theatre, Salem, com- 
mencing Monday evening, May 11th, 
the authors, Thomas P. Swift and 
John P. Mulgrew, two Chicago news- 
paper men, have provided an un- 
usually original and diverting plot. 
The offering is in three acts and in- 
terest is not permitted to lag one 
iota. The story concerns the rise 
of ‘‘Jiggs Mahoney,’’ a good na- 
tured Irishman, who has made his 
pile as a contractor. ‘‘Jiggs’’ is 
one of those individuals with ideas 
of his own. Despite his newly ac- 
quired wealth he still clings to the 
customs and manners of the days of 
his poverty and somehow cannot in- 
ure himself to the ways becoming a 
man of means. His wife, a motherly 
woman, with two grown daughters, 
enters society. ‘‘Mrs Mahoney’’ is 
at once surrounded by a lot of para- 
sites who turn her head and fill her 
with all sorts of outlandish ideas, 
consequently there is trouble and 
this forms the nucleus of an inter- 
esting comedy with novel complica- 
tions and plenty of surprises and 
mirth. 
‘‘My husband is a most inveterate 
reader,’’ exclaimed Mrs. Knox with 
a slight tone of ennui. ‘‘He reads 
until dawn every morning. Why, 
last night I found him asleep with 
his nose in ‘V. V.’s Eye’s!’ ”’ 
‘‘Perhaps,’? commented hir hus- 
band’s bookish friend, ‘‘you should 
be thangful you did not find him 
with his nose in ‘The Inside of the 
Cup!’ ’’—Kansas City Star. 
