petition be granted. 
Chairman Knight arose to a point of 
order, as this matter, he said, lays en- 
tirely with the selectmen, according to 
the law. The moderator ruled the point 
well taken. 
F. K. Swett said that had Mr. 
Knight taken this position at the time the 
petition was presented, he (Swett) 
wouldn’t have voted to bring it before 
the town. 7 
G. S. Sinnicks. If the selectmen have 
this power, why do they bring it before 
the town. 
M. E. Gorman moved that the select- 
men be requested to grant prayer of pe- 
titioners. 
E. S. Knight amended by adding 
** provided it be done under conditions 
consistent with the laws of the common- 
wealth and the by-laws of the town.’’ 
There was considerable arguing back 
and forth, but the vote on the amend- 
ment was finally taken, and lost by a vote 
of 56 to 41. The original motion was 
then carried unanimously, which was 
that the selectmen be requested to grant 
petition. 
The report of the finance committee 
was accepted. 
It was also voted to pay the moderator 
$25 for his services. 
It was voted to raise by 
$120,000. 
The meeting was dissolved at 9.50. 
taxation 
In Yachting Circles. 
Charles H. Tweed of the Beverly 
Farms summer colony, is having built at 
Lawley’s a handsome 45-ft. semi-cruiser 
designed by Swasey, Raymond & Page. 
The boat is 9-ft. beam and has two cock- 
pits, one forward and the other aft of the 
cabin house, which ts located about amid 
ships. The boat will be driven by a 
six-cylinder, 40-horsepower engine and 
will be beautifully finished in teak. Her 
owner will use her for short trips along 
the coast and between his summer home 
and Boston. 
Business Men’s Association. 
A meeting of the Business Men’s as- 
sociation will be held at Commercial 
hall, Beverly, next Wednesday evening, 
April 21, at 8 o’clock, at which the 
clerks will be guests of the association. 
The meeting will be addressed by Ralph 
Alberton, supervisor of employment at 
Filene’s, Boston, whose subject will be 
** Relations between Employer and Em- 
ployee.’’ 
N. Greenberg 
(Formerly located in the Postoffice Block) 
Cobbler 
Will open up for business in the Kimball blk., 
Union St., Manchester, on or about 
April 20 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
Rahs EES ESE SSS S33 332333333 2y 
ay 
w . Ww 
¥ & Sorivty Notes 2 & 
RY Ww 
Sgeszes2seesezccececcceecee® 
Miss Curtis and Miss Clara Curtis, 
daughters of the late Caleb A. Curtis, of 
¢ 
““Crow Island,’? Manchester Cove, 
were registered in Paris last week. “The 
Misses Curtis will spend the summer 
months at their North Shore home as 
usual. 
Among next week’s arrivals at Man- 
chester will be the George E. Cabots 
and Mrs. Cabot’'s mother, Mrs. Hem- 
enway. The following week Mrs. 
Hemenway’s other daughter, Mrs. C. 
W. Taintor and family will arrive. 
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Longyear, 
who are to occupy Mrs. F. T. Brad- 
bury’s cottage on Smith’s Point this sum- 
mer, were down Sunday. ‘They will 
arrive for the season the first week in 
May. 
Mrs. Charles Head. 
The death of Mrs. Hortense, wife of 
Charles Head of Manchester and Bos- 
ton, at her home, 412 Beacon street, 
Boston, this morning, comes asa great 
shock to North Shore and Boston  soc- 
iety. 
Last week Mr. and Mrs. Head went 
over to New York to meet their daugh- 
ter, Mrs. Wm. A. Russell, who came 
home from So. America. Mrs. Head 
contracted a cold, evidently. Her death 
this morning resulted from pneumonia. 
She had been ill only a few days. 
Mrs. Head was born at Nahant July 
18, 1854, a daughter of Joseph Swain 
and Mary (Taylor) Lovering. Besides 
a husband, she is survived by two daugh- 
ters, Mrs. Wm. A. Russell, and Mrs. 
Philip Stockton, and bya brother and 
two sisters, —Charles Lovering of Bos- 
ton, Mrs. Frank Marion of Boston and 
Mrs. Henry Howland of New York. 
Mrs. Head was one of Manchester’s 
best known summer residents. In fact, 
so much do the family admire the shore, 
they spend very nearly the whole year 
here. Their house at Manchester has 
been leased for the summer. 
Mrs. Isabella L. Fabyan, widow of 
the late George F. Fabyan, died at her 
home on Warren street, Brookline, 
Monday. Funeral services were held 
yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Fabyan has 
occupied Mrs. Gordon Prince’s house at 
West Manchester for the past two years, 
and was to be here again this season. 
She leaves three sons and two daughters, 
George Fabyan of Chicago, F. W. 
Fabyan, Dr. Marshal Fabyan and Mrs. 
I. R. Thomas of Boston and Mrs. Per- 
cival H. Lombard of Brookline. 
Why not have your Printing done at the 
office of THE BREEZE PRINT? 
SUCCESS 
MAGAZINE 
Some Striking Features in the May Number 
THE WOMAN IN THE DARK 
The soul-stirring tale of two Irish girls anda 
man 
By Katherine Gecil Thurston 
THE FIRST INSTALLMENT OF 
THE SKY MAN 
A brilliant new serial romance 
By Henry Kitchell Webster 
THE PIT AND THE GROWER 
Manipulating the grain market—How it 
is done, with some speculation as to 
who stands the cost 
By Will Payne 
“FIVE HUNDRED A YEAR” 
What it means—a plain human document 
By the Wife of a Gountry Preacher 
“THIS MAN DIEHL” 
The Champion Speed Painter of America 
By Gharles Battell Loomis 
And these are not all—far From It! 
There will also be good stories by 
Joseph G. Lincoln 
“The Sc’ ool Picnic” 
Gharlotte Wilson 
“Her Husband's People’’ 
Robert Barr 
“Jimmy Pepperton of Oshkazoo” 
Another theatrical exposure article by 
Walter Prichard Eaton 
An inspiring article by 
Orison Swett Marden 
and THE WORLD IN A NUTSHELL 
together with other helpful departments 
OUT APRIL 18TH 
$1.00 a Year 10c. a Gopy 
Our representative is 
MR. JAMES BEATON 
L. Box 16 
MANCHESTER, MASS 
He will be glad to receive your subscription 
EURUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUAUA; 
3 - 
> x Mannolia x 
] 
R 
DVN 
J 
‘ = 
DALAL LAAN ELUDES 
During the severe storm recently one 
of the beautiful large willows on the 
shore road at Magnolia,—one of those 
most admired for its picturesque shape 
and setting, was blown over by the wind 
_and destroyed. 
Breeze subscription $1.00. 
