18 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
coer eee ome 
: North Shore Breeze § 
ES ENS O PAD © CATERED 
Published every Friday Afternoon. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor and Proprietor. 
Telephones: Manchester 137, 132-3. 
Knight Building, - Manchester, Mass. 
$2.00 a year; 3 
Advertising Rate 
Subscription Rates: 
months (trial) 50 cents. 
Card on application. 
Qe To insure publication, contributio~s 
ae 
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, 
Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postoffice. 
NuMBER 15 
Votume 8: ° April 15, 1910 
SS ER ee a SY 
Apr. 16— 22 
SUN FULL TIDE 
Rises Sets | a. mM. P.M. 
16°Sa. =. 53 6 26 | 4 05 4 47: 
17-Su.° 5°2 627° | 5.08 5 55 
18M. 50 6:28 21-6 17 7 03 
19. Tus. 4 5802629 2h 8 03 
20.We gh 4557. 96 31ers} 8223 BSF 
QW Ph, 2. 4,55. 712632: 19-17 9 43 
22 Fr... 454 .6 33 |10 05 10 21 
Se 
A NEEDED improvement! One of 
the most dangerous corners any- 
where along the North Shore is that 
on West street, Beverly Farms, near 
the Neal Rantoul estate. .At this 
point the road bends sharply at 
right angles.. This would not be so 
“bad_if the view of the street as one 
approaches the corner, from either 
direction, were not obstructed by a 
thick hedge along the street line. If 
‘the hedge were removed the element 
of danger ‘at this point would be 
ereatly diminished, for on approach- 
ing the turn in automobile or car- 
‘ylage, one could see ahead of him. 
As it is now the view of the street 
beyond the turn is absolutely cut off 
until the corner is reached. Being 
on the main highway along the 
North Shore it is a wonder more 
than one serious accident has not 
happened here. In fact, we have 
been told that on several occasions 
accidents have been averted only by 
the closest margin. . As the entranee 
2G. E. WILLMONTON .:. 
Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law 
to several estates leave the highway 
at this point, including the entrance 
te the Neal Rantoul and the Haven 
estates, and also to Mrs. Leiter’s 
new summer property, there -is all 
the more ‘reason why’ something 
should be done. 
We urge the attention of those in 
authority to this matter. Either 
have the hedge removed or widen 
the street as this point! 
CorKscREWs,—The synonym of the 
saloon no longer, with the coming 
into use of so many new fangled bot- 
tle stoppers. Corks may come and 
corks may go, but corkscrews go on 
forever. There are all kinds of 
corkscrews even corkscrew charae- 
ters. oo 
Did. you . ever 
stop to moralize 
about, eorkserews other than the as- 
sociations they foster? 
of thing without center or cireum- 
ference. It has no straight line. It 
twists and squirms.., Did you. ever 
see a man with a mind,like that? 
He may be classed as a sort O& hu- 
man corkscrew. = wy 3 
Ile gives am evasive answer. 
twists in and out of certain facts. It 
is difficult to follow the meanderings 
of such a mind. We say about some 
people, 
down to anything.’’ You cannot de- 
pend upon a corkserew’s line of ae- 
tion either, In all they do or say in 
life there is something crooked. 
There is not a straight line in them. 
We sometimes call them 
sticks.’’ Call them ¢orkserews. We 
shall never forget the kindergarten 
tale that begins,—‘There was -a 
crooked ——.’’ It is the fable of the 
corkscrew. We say they make 
‘crooked paths.’’? Corkscrews make 
crooked paths. They never walk a 
straight path. They never lived in 
the “‘street called straight.’’ It is 
not alone the. poor inebriate that 
walks zig-zag. There are mental in- 
ebriates whose squirmings and twist- 
ings make one dizzy to follow. 
May we all be saved from famili- 
arity with this kind of a corkscrew, 
It is a sort 
He’ 
‘““You can never pin them - 
‘“erooked’ 
both in our associations and in our- 
selves. 
Aprin. 19th—next . Tuesday—will 
be a busy day along the North Shore, 
if the weather is propitious. And we 
say this with a big-IF. It all de- 
pends on the weather. Being a holi- 
day many summer residents take 
this opportunity to come to their es- 
tates to ‘‘look things over.’’? Many 
take initial steps towards “‘opening’’ 
for the season. Landlords of hotels 
-and boarding-houses as well as own- 
ers of summer cottages that are to 
be let, are arranging to be upon their 
“premises all day, so that prospective 
summer guests may choose rooms or 
cottages for the coming season. 
Most of the hotel managers send out 
invitations for this occasion, Let’s 
hope the weather will be as good as- 
it has been for the last month ! 
MANCHESTER citizens should take 
considerable interest in the hearing 
to be given next Monday afternoon 
ai the Town hall, relative to the 
- proposed lay-out of a new street be-— 
tween Beach and Sea streets, leaving 
‘Beach street at a point near the 
-Masconomo stables and coming out’ 
on Sea street at its junction with) 
Masconomo, near the estate of the 
Misses Bartlett. The prime object of 
this road is to facilitate travel to Old 
Neck. At the present time, hills are 
encountered going to and from this— 
section, but the street now proposed — 
would run over level ground. 
Prescription: Take a thousand 
dollars’ worth of Chase auto wagons, 
such as last year’s water board 
bought for the Manchester Water 
Department, dilute with at least two- 
thirds of this year’s board and one 
Chauffeur and a few others, mix 
well with Polities and then throw 
the car away and hire a horse. : 
Oh, what a subject for an edito- 
rial, if we had time to write one! 
Gov. Draper has issued a proclam-, 
ation designating Saturday, April 
30, to be observed as Arbor Day. j 
t 
Willmonton’s | Agency 
SCHOOL AND UNION STS., MANCHESTER 
OLD SOUTHBLDG., BOSTON - 
INSURANGE OF ALL KINDS. 
REAL ESTATE 
Mortgages, Loans, Summer Houses 
for Rent. Telephone Coa 
2 
- 
ve 
j 
