NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
~ AMONG THE BOWLERS. 
Standing at End of Sixteenth Round. 
New Single String Record of 148. 
The 16th round of the Manchester 
Bowling league came to a close Mon- 
day night. One of the features of 
the round was the breaking of the 
single-string record. Daniel Rear- 
don rolled 143, thus establishing a 
new mark. 
Team Standing. 
Woh™sizost ~~ P. C. PuskS 
Regals  .2 7S. 48 16 752 21,064 
Speed Boys ...47 17 736 21,312 
Of Ve £555.8°339 25 610 20,520 
GYECKS? wn tonotie 33 31 517 20,588 
Business Men .29 35 455 20,649 
Red Men ..... 28 3 439 19,927 
K.S0F Get. Basix 16 48 250 18,949 
Gardeners ....13 51 203 12,477 
Those with a three-string total of 
275 or more are as follows 
L. Hutchinson 328 A. Chaulk 294 
P. Pappas 324. ~_D. Riordan 292 
ane ERUSG 322 C. Votteros 292 
A. Jones 311 L. White 287 
G. Norris 310 M. Revelas 286 
C. E. Bell 309 C. Stanley 286 
A. Crocker 308 D. Healey 284 
H. Bell 307 W. Bell 284 
W. Rust 306 W. Votteros 283 
“W. Hall 301 J. Chapman 282 
J. Nazarro 301 E. Dechene 282 
C. Kelliher 300 G. Jones 281 
P. Parrell 297 ~ P. Karnesy 279 
O. Lee 297 D. Coughlin 279 
E. Semons 296 EE. Lethbridge 278 
P. Votteros 295 J. Allen 276 
3 RG Tysy| 294 G. Slade 276 
J. Mullen 294 G. Votteros 276 
Those with an average score of 
80 or more are as follows: 
W. Hall 94 1-5 EK. Howe 86 
F. Mosher 93 4-5 J. Nazzarro, 851-4 
A. Jones 93 1-2 R. Crocker 85 
A. Crocker 93 G. Jones 85 
C. Kelliher’ 924-5 J. Saulnier 85 
P. Pappas 905-7 .J. Allen 85 
H. Bell 90 1-3 L. White 84 6-7 
C. Bell 89 2-3 G. Votteros 846-7 
C. Votteros 89 2-3 W. Cook 84 3-5 
E. Semons 89 1-3 H. Slade 84 1-2 
W. Rust 89 W. Votteros 841-2 
G. Slade 89 D. Coughlin 841-4 
P. Kearney 882-3 A. Chaulk 84 1-9 
D. Healey 88 1-3 A. Gillis 83 2-3 
G. Rust 88 J. Jeffries 83 
P. Farrell 87 5-6 P. Votteros 83 
M. Revelas - 875-7 - B. Stanley 83 
D. Riordan 873-4 J. Mullen 82 2-3 
$. Norris 871-2 P. Anderson 821-2 
Hutchinson 871-3 J. Chapman 823-8 
W. Bell 87 1-5 BE. Valentine 82 1-4 
C. Stanley 87 J. Morrison 82 
A. Butler 862-3 Lethbridge 81 
E. Dechene 861-2 F. Bullock 811-3 
O. Lee 861-4 D. Knight 80 4-7 
J. Cool 86 W. Cool 80 2-7 
Improvements are being made to 
the building owned by Miss Camp- 
bell on Beach st., Manchester, and 
used by her as'a summer dressmak- 
ing establishment. Workmen are 
today moving the building around. 
An addition is to be made ‘to it. 
Chester L. Crafts is the contractor. 
Parent-Teacher Association Meeting. 
The Parent-Teacher association, 
recently organized in Manchester, 
met Wednesday evening at the Price 
Primary school. The speaker of the 
evening was B. F. Gregory, super- 
intendent of the Chelsea public 
schools, who gave a very helpful 
talk on ‘‘The Home and the School.’’ 
Previous to Mr. Gregory’s talk, Ab- 
bott Hoare sang, and Miss Florence 
Kauffman played on the piano. Miss 
Kauffman also played at the close 
of the evening. 
In his talk Mr. Gregory empha- 
sized the position of the teacher in 
the community. The teacher’s influ- 
ence on the child, he said, depends 
to a large degree on her personality. 
A teacher can work most effectively 
when she is looked up to and re- 
spected by the parents. The par- 
ents should exalt the personality of 
the teacher. If they do not, she can- 
not meet with the best results. The 
success of any teacher with a child 
caepends on her influence with that 
child. A child must respect his 
teacher. Is the talk heard in most 
of our homes regarding the teacher 
such as would make the child look 
up to and cause respect for the 
teacher? What have you gained 
when you have made the child think 
less of his teacher? 
If you want to make a boy a sue- 
cess, you must make him feel he 
ean, not that he cannot. The teach- 
er knows she is not as good as she 
ought to be—the mere feeling that 
you respect her makes her feel that 
she must do the best she knows how. 
The first thing is to make the teach- 
er feel you respect her. Show her 
kindness. The best work you ean 
get from the teacher is not what 
she is paid for. Let us think of the 
teacher and come to her aid with 
sympathy and kind words. The 
teacher has faults, so have you. 
During the social, after the lec- 
ture, the parents were given an op- 
portunity to meet the teachers. The 
social committee of the club, com- 
posed of Mrs. A. L. Sabin, chairman ; 
Mrs. Patrick Cleary, Mrs. Charles 
Francis, Mrs. John Connors, Mrs. 
William Fleming, Mrs. Edward 
Height, Mrs. F. J. Merrill, Miss Nel- 
le Leonard and Mrs. S. Albert Sin- 
nicks, was in charge of this feature 
of the evening and the teachers of 
the Primary school, Miss Gertrude 
Sherman, Miss Nellie Leonard, Miss 
Lothrop, Miss Kitfield and Miss Cal- 
den, were the hostesses of the eve- 
ning. 
The association numbers some 84 
members. There were about 150 
€ 
3 x Manchester x : 
Chester L. Crafts has the contract 
for building a new residence for Mr. 
and Mrs. Fred Hartley on North st. 
The new Estey organ for the Bap- 
tist church arrived the first of this 
week and has been set up. It will 
be tried out tonight at about 9 
o’clock and in all probability will 
be turned over to the church at that 
time. 
The derailment of an engine just 
beyond the cut bridge, going into 
Gloucester, Tuesday, was the cause 
of much inconvenience to travelers 
on this branch of the Boston & 
Maine. 
M. J. Bowers, coachman for Mrs. 
Russell Sturgis, was in town the first 
of the week renewing acquaintances. 
The death of William Iredale, 
brakeman on a Boston & Maine 
train, at Hamilton, Wednesday, is a 
very sad affair. Mr. Iredale was 
engaged in adjusting the steam hose 
between the cars, and as he stepped 
back to escape the steam, stepped in 
front of an engine used on the Es- 
sex branch. He died about an hour 
after the accident. Mr. Iredale was 
well known to Gloucester branch 
patrons, as he was a brakeman on 
the train of which George S. Ken- 
nard is conductor. He was well liked 
by all who knew him. 
The Boston papers, the first of the 
week, gave an account of the arrest 
of a pickpocket in the Park street 
subway, Boston. He was caught in 
the act of stealing a chatelaine bag 
from Mrs. Lewis Killam of this 
town, said to contain $600. 
persons present Wednesday  eve- 
ning. The next meeting will be held 
April 20, when it is expected that 
Prof. William Hart will give a talk 
on ‘‘ Juvenile clubs and gardens.”’ 
Do You Want a Tenement 
With spring close at hand you may 
want a better tenement. State your wants 
in a small ad. in The Breeze and you are 
certain to get results. Perhaps you have a 
ROOM TO LET 
for the summer. Many others have found 
The Breeze very helpful. You try it! 
One-half cent a word after the first week. 
One cent a word the first week. 
