18 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
orem 
* North Shore ee. 
Ce ae 
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. 
g@s- To insure publication, contributio~s 
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. 
VOLUME 8. May 27, 1910 NuMBER 21 
May 28 — June 3 
SUN FULL TIDE 
Rises Sets A.M. P.M. 
28 Sa. 4 12 7 10 1 28 2 02 
29 Su. 4 12 Tal Del 2 47 
30 M. 411 7 ale 3 03 3537, 
31 Tu. 411 7713 3 58 4-34 
1 W. 4 10 7 14 4 56 5 30 
2 ele 4 10 Tents 5757 6 28 
Saurr: 49 Fel S A G57, 7 23 
is ee ee + 
As to testimony of experts! It is 
amusing sometimes to read in the 
accounts of various court trials of 
what ‘‘experts’’ have to say. One 
expert will testify very strongly as 
to a man’s sanity; another expert 
will give an entirely opposite opin- 
ion. Yet both are experts. This 
was emphasized very strongly in the 
suit of Davis vs. the City of Glouces- 
ter to recover damages for the tak- 
ing of eight and one-half acres of 
land near the canal in that city. One 
set of experts testified that the land 
was worth in the vicinity of $50,000, 
while the experts on the opposite 
side testified it was worth in the 
vicinity of $4000. The court render- 
ed a verdict of $18,000. 
Tue laying of the lines of the New 
England Telegraph and Telephone 
Co. under ground between Beverly 
Farms and Pride’s Crossing is worth 
a little more than passing notice. 
Nothing is more important to people 
-. G. E. WILLMONTODN .... 
Atterney and Counsellor-at-Law 
who visit this vieinity in the summer 
months, and those who stay here the 
year round, than the beautifying of 
the North Shore. The tall poles, 
with their crossbars and ‘many 
strands of wire, do not tend to make 
the roads attractive and it is sincere- 
ly hoped that other companies will 
follow the good lead of the N. E. T. 
& T. Co. and lay wires beneath the 
surface. The company has made this 
move at their own initiative. . The 
Beverly Electrie Co. ought to follow 
suit,—and not only that, but all wires 
along the North Shore ought to be 
put underground. It will have to 
come sooner or later. 
Tne necessity of returning to the 
Senate such an able and influential 
member as Senator Lodge was the 
subject of an editorial recently in 
the Washington Evening Star. It is 
pointed out that Senator Lodge is 
condemned in the West for putting 
in a tariff bill for the especial benefit 
of his constituents, and that it is 
difficult to understand, if this is so, 
why these constituents should wish 
to retire Mr. Lodge. The editorial 
Says: 
““If Mr. Lodge has served New 
England at the expense of other see- 
tions of the country, he cannot, ex- 
cept upon altruistic reasoning, have 
deserved New Hngland censure. And 
altruism is not politics. If he has 
not served New England in a provin- 
cial way, then he has not deserved 
the censure of the party across the 
Alleghenies. What there may be in 
the opposition to Mr. Lodge will 
come out when the campaign opens. 
But it would be surprising if so able 
and influential a man should be re- 
tired at a time when his party stands 
in need of its best.’ 
Manchester’s Interest in the Beverly 
' Hospital 
The Manchester Woman’s club 
wishes to call the attention of the 
people of the town to certain privi- 
leges in the Beverly Hospital that 
we hold in common with Beverly and 
some other towns and which, per- 
haps, are’not generally known. 
Last year the club contributed 
$100 to the hospital—the proceeds 
of the play given in this town by the 
Beverly Dramatic club. 
It was thought by some that a 
more local charity would have been 
more appropriate, but when it is un- — 
derstood that our rights are the 
same as those of Beverly. We can 
feel that their interests are ours and 
that contributions to them are for 
our benefit also. 
We print here the rate of charg-- 
ing at the Beverly Hospital: 
1. Regular ward patients: Pa- 
tients from this district (which in- 
cludes Beverly, Manchester, Wen- 
ham, QWamilton, Ipswich, Topsfield, 
Danvers, $7 per week; patients from 
outside this district, $1.50; patients 
in children’s ward (age limit 12), $7. 
The regular ward patients will be 
attended by the physician or sur- 
geon on duty at the time, and the 
charge covers such service. 2. Free 
patients: Patients from this district, 
if unable to pay the regular charges, 
may be admitted free in the discre- 
tion of the matron; but, exeept in 
case of emergency, the number of 
free cases at any time will be limited 
to the accommodations of the hos- 
pital. Free patients from outside 
the district may be admitted in the 
discretion of the executive commit- 
tee. All free patients will be attend- 
ed by the physician or surgeon on 
duty at the time. 3. Private pa- 
tients: In the regular wards, $10.50; 
in private rooms in ward building, 
$17.50; in private rooms in private 
ward in administration building, 
$21.00, $25.00, $35.00; maternity 
ward cases, $15.00; in private rooms 
in maternity ward, $25.00; use of— 
special 
board of 
operating room, $5.00; 
nurses (pupil), $15.00; 
special nurses (not pupil), per day, 
$1.00. Private patients will be at- 
tended by such members of the staff 
as they may select; 
charge does not cover such services. 
4. Medicines and diet outside the 
hospital list will be charged extra, . 
such charge to be made as the ma- 
tron may deem reasonable. 5. The 
obligation for the hospital charges 
shall be secured in writing from the 
employers or friends of patients, or 
from the authorities of the places 
where the patients belong, or by the 
direet deposit of money equivalent 
to the amount of board for a period 
of two weeks or more if deemed 
necessary. 
Willmonton’s Agency 
OLD SOUTHBLDG., BOSTON 
SCHOOL AND UNION STS., MANCHESTER 
INSURANGE OF ALL KINDS 
REAL ESTATE 
- Mortgages, Loans, Summer Houses 
for Rent. Telephone Cor. 
the hospital. 
