12 : 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
GRE RSG? 6 GRD 6 QUES 
e North Share Mrerze e 
RS fet pe ES 
Published every Friday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE Editor and Proprietor. 
Telephones: Manchester 137, 132-3. 
Knight Building, - Manchester, Mass. 
$1,00 a year; 3 months 
Subscription Rates : 
Rate Card on 
(trial) 25 cents. Advertising 
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 Norte SHORE BREEZE, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postofiice. 
VOLUME 7. Vavis lca 9: NUMBER 3 
Jan. 16—22, 
SUN BULESIDE 
Rises Sets | a. M. P. M. 
16 Sa. 7A 4 38 6 04 6 28 
17 Su. 7 10 4 39 6 57 aes) 
18 M. Field) 4 40 7 50 8 20 
19 Tu. eg 4-4] 8 42 oF 15 
20 W. i 4 43 9 34 10 07 
2 ach. 728 4 44 10 25 10 57 
22 Fr. 7 7 4 45 ie By Bo 11 47 
“WE were asked this week by a de- 
linquent subscriber why we kept on send- 
. ing the paper after the subscription date 
had expired. Every weekly paper in 
small cities and towns is forced to do 
this. Should we stop subscriptions when 
time expires, nine times out of ten the 
subscriber would give us a “calling 
down’ for insinuating that his credit 
was not good. Rather than casta re- 
flection upon the honesty of a subscriber 
to pay a small debt, it is next toa nec- 
essity for a home paper to continue send- 
ing the paper after the time has expired. 
It is not necessary for the big city dailies 
and weeklies to follow this rule, as their 
subscribers live at a distance and are not 
personal friends, as is the case with a 
majority of our subscribers. Our sub- 
scribers should deem it an honor to 
know that we do not doubt their integrity 
and continue sending the paper after the 
date to which they have paid. Should 
they desire their paper discontinued they 
should notify us, and remit to date if they 
have not already dohe so.’’—The Jtem, 
Newhuryport. 
Same here! 
An Editor as He Was, Not as He Is. 
An editor iz a male being whose _ buz- 
ziness it iz to navigate a nuzepaper. He 
writes editorials, grinds out poetry, in- 
terts deths and weddings, sorts out mane- 
skrips, keeps a waste-basket, blows the 
devil, steals matter, fites other people’s 
battles and sells hiz paper for dollar and 
fifty cents a year, takes white beans and 
aple saas for pay when he can get it, 
raises a large family, works nineteen 
hours out of every twenty-four, knows 
no Sunday, gets dammed by everybody, 
and once in a while whipt by someboddy, 
lives poor, dise middle-aged and often 
broken-hearted, leaves no money, iz re- 
warded for a life uf toil with a short free 
obituary puff in the nuzepapers. Ex- 
changes please copy.---Josh Billings, in 
New York Weekly 
The Essex Division of the Massachu- 
setts Branch of the Red Cross 
at Work. 
The members of the Essex County 
division of the Massachusetts Branch of 
Red Cross are busily at work placing 
boxes in shops or other central places, 
that the poorer people may have a chance 
to give aid to the Italian sufferers without 
embarrassment. Each penny tells. 
As one of the ladies who took charge 
of boxes went along the street to place 
them, several persons stopped to put in 
their mite while the box was in her 
hands, 
In this way the great humanitarian 
meaning of the Red Cross society is 
brought home to the people. It is a 
practical illustration of the giving “* of 
the people, by the people, for the 
people,’’—not only the rich to the poor; 
but that the poorest can feel, with one 
cent spared from hard labored earnings, 
the self respect of the prince of givers. 
Louisa P. Lorine, 
Sec’y Essex Division. 
sS 
fe Gte SeEBeBy 
a o a 
w sy Ot - = 9S y Mee Se 
Ww £\3 Uihe Vu SOPe 5 o OW 
W ‘ a WwW 
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A fee Banta policemen one 
prove useful in this North Shore district. 
Mayor Trowt of Beverly has recom- 
mended that some Beverly officers be 
provided with motor cycles. These 
mounted officers could patrol the long 
stretches of North Shore roads. “They 
would be of value in checking auto 
speeders, and also in chasing thieves and 
other criminals.—Salem News. 
Business Men's Association. 
‘The annual meeting of the Beverly 
Business Men’s association, which in- 
cludes business men from Wenham, 
Hamilton and Manchester, as well as 
Beverly, was held at the Board of Trade 
a 
rooms, Beverly, Monday evening, when 
the following officers were elected: 
Albert Vittum, president; John Gird- 
ler of Beverly, Franklin K. Hooper of 
Manchester, vice presidents; Benjamin 
A. Patch of Beverly, secretary; Roland 
P. Woodbury, of Beverly, treasurer; 
W. B. Publicover, Beverly Farms, 
~Horace Standley, Manchester, S. C. 
Gould, Hamilton, I. A. Sturtevant, 
Charles F. Lee, O. M. Field” and 
Thomas F. Delaney, Beverly, directors. 
The membership roll now comprises 
165 names of which 26 were from Man- 
chester, 13 from Beverly Farms and the 
balance from Beverly proper. 
‘The annual banquet will be held in 
City hall, Beverly, on Feb. 11, when it 
is expected to have Charles S. Bosworth 
of Springfield and other well known 
speakers to address the association. 
He Needed the Money. 
Joseph Pink of Boston, who formerly 
conducted harness making establish- 
ments at Manchester and Beverly Farms, 
had a little experience with an office boy 
the past week, which the Post chronicles 
thus: 
ce 6 
I need the money more than you, 
and if I meet with success I shall repay 
you.’ 
“ This brief note yesterday caused ex- 
citement in the office of Joseph Pink, a 
wheelwright at 67A Chestnut street. 
‘“ The sender of the epistle had been 
given $125 and $300 in checks to de- 
posit in a bank. 
‘Ralph Crockett is the youth’s 
name and he is 17 years of age. He 
claims to live in Pinckney street, but the 
police could not find anybody by that 
name in the street.”’ 
K. of C. Omit April Assessment. 
Manchester and Beverly Farms mem- 
bers of the Knights of Columbus will be 
pleased to learn that at the quarterly meet- 
ing of the National board of directors of 
the Knights of Columbus, at New 
Haven, Wednesday, it was voted to omit 
the April assessment on account of the 
excellent condition of the  order’s 
finance. The board recommended that 
members of the order contribute to the 
help of the Italian earthquake sufferers 
and that the money be sent to the Apos- 
tolic delegate at Washington. 
The sum of $100,000 was taken from 
the mortuary relief fund for investment. 
The gross assets of the order showed an 
increase of $400,000 over those of last 
year. z 
Over 100 January Records at Woes 
bury’s, Beach st. 
INSURANGE OF ALL KINDS 
Best Companies Lowest Rates 
School and Union Streets 
Manchester t! Massachusetts 
GEO. E. WILLMONTON 
Telephone Connection 
REAL ESTATE 
Justice of the Peace, Notary Public 
Mortgages, Loans, 
Old South Bidg., Boston 
