NORTH’ SHORE BREEZE 
io, | 
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 
Advertisements under this head at 2c per word the first week. One 
cent per word after the first week. Stamps may be used in payment 
~ WANTED— One of the large magazine publish- 
ing houses desires to employ an active man 
or woman in this community to handle a spe- 
cial plan which has proven unusually profit- 
able Good opening for right paty Ad- 
dress with two references, Publisher, Box 
155, Times Sq. Sta., New York City 4-5 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Miss Florence Leach is to be one 
‘of the group of nymphs to be lead 
by Mrs. A. H. Higginson and Mrs. 
Bowditch in the ballet of ‘‘Sylvia,”’ 
to be given February 2d, at the 
Boston Opera House, under the di- 
rection of the Ways and Means 
committee of the Mass. Suffrage 
association. Miss Leach, though 
not a Manchester girl, has spent 
most of her summers here, living in 
the old house of her great-great- 
grandfather, Major Israel Foster. 
She is also the grand-daughter of 
the late Geo. C. Leach, who was one 
of Boston’s well-known bankers. 
Miss Leach has not been able to fol- 
low her profession for over a year, 
on account of poor health, but she 
plans to return to the stage another 
season. 
EQUAL SUFFRAGE NOTES 
At the last meeting of the Twen- 
tieth Century club, of Boston, one of 
the two speakers was our summer 
neighbor, Miss Mabel Boardman, 
who spoke on Red Cross work, and 
the other was Mr. Pethick Lawrence 
of. England, who spoke on Peace 
work. It was an interesting com- 
bination, especially as Mr. Lawrence 
is a strong Suffragist and Miss 
Boardman is—or was—a_ strong 
Anti. Among broad-minded people 
in these days, barriers are rapidly 
breaking down. We only regret 
that Miss Boardman did not say a 
word for Peace. An ardent Peace 
advocate, who is a recent convert to 
Suffrage, is Mrs. J. Malcolm Forbes, 
who joined the Suffrage ranks after 
the ‘‘Peace Luncheon’’ for Mrs. 
Pethick Lawrence, in Boston, last 
Friday. And the famous war-news 
writer and speaker, Irvin Cobb, has 
returned. from Belgium convert- 
ed both to the Peace movement and 
to woman Suffrage! 
Another famous North Shore 
neighbor, ex-President Wm. Taft, 
recently made a very good Suffrage 
argument, perhaps without mean- 
ing to, (when speaking in Boston), 
when he urged that all girls should 
| DENTIST 
J. Russell MacKinnon, D. M.D. 
10 Church St., MANCHESTER Tel. 85 
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays 
Old South Building, Boston, 294 Washington St. 
ondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays 
J. P. LATIONS 
CARRIAGE BUILDER 
Storage for Carriages Carriage Painting 
First-Class Work 
Shop—Depot Square - Manchester, Mass, 
TOWN WARRANT 
The warrant for the Annual Town 
Meeting will be closed Saturday, Jan. 
23rdero15. ats 0 clock, PM: 
All persons having articles for in- 
sertion must submit them to the 
Board of Selectmen on or before that 
date: 
WALTER R. BELL, 
GrorcE R. DEAN, 
FRANK G. CHEEVER, 
Selectmen of Manchester. 
1-2-3 
have a trade or profession, so that 
they need not be driven to loneless 
marriage for a living or for a posi- 
tion. In other words, he urged the 
economic independence of women, 
and said a strong word of respect 
for single women, at the same time 
advocating a higher ideal of mar- 
riage. A few years ago this would 
have been considered very radical 
‘‘woman’s rights’. talk. But. as 
someone has said, ‘‘The world do 
move!’’ We do not know whether 
Mr. Taft has become a Suffragist; 
(Miss Helen Taft is one;) but we 
do know that President Wilson re- 
cently stated that he was ‘‘not op- 
posed to Equal Suffrage.’’  Presi- 
dents do move! 
The Ways and Means committee 
of the Mass. Woman Suffrage Asso- 
ciation announce the first produc- 
tion in Boston of the ‘‘Ballet of 
Sylvia,’’ at the Opera House, on 
Tuesday afternoon, Feb. 2. For 
this beautiful spectacle the tickets 
will run from $2.00 to 50 cents, and 
may be had of Miss Fanny C. Os- 
has opened for he season her 
HAND LAUNDRY 
72 Pleasant St,, Manchester 
Tel. 326 W 
First Class Work Guaranteed 
| MRS. MARGARET LEE 
Miss Margaret M. McNamara 
Manicuring, Scalp Massaege 
Marcel Waving 
24 Norwood Avenue, Manchester 
Telephone 164 
N. GREENBERG 
CUSTOM SHOE REPAIRING 
Repairing done while you wait 
Guaranteed to be Satisfactory 
Kimball Building, Union Street 
opp. Postoffice 
Manchester - - Mass. 
Card Tables, Folding Weddings, Teas 
Chairs, Gold Chairs Dances, Lawn Parties 
Ww. J. CREED 
Caterer 
PRIVATE WAITING 
Boston, Mass. Chambers 
Tel. 3040 Back Bay 
Beverly Cove, Mass. 
Tel. 765 
PUBLIC HEARING. 
On petition of James Beaton a 
public hearing will be held at the 
office of the selectmen on Tuesday 
evening wu lane V2sthy wat) /SoMocock 
for permission to maintain a Bowser 
Gasoline Outfit on the sidewalk in 
front of his place of business, 50 
Central Street. 
WALTER R. BELL, 
GrorcE R. DEAN, 
FRANK G. CHEEVER, 
Selectmen of Manchester. 
Manchester, Jan. 12, I9QI5. 
| 3,4 
good, 221 Beacon st., Boston, or at 
Werrick’s next week. As in the 
case of the ‘‘Bay State Bazaar’’ last 
autumn, half of the proceeds will 
eo to the Red Cross. Anti-Suffrag- 
ists have been constantly stating in 
print and in spech, that they are de- 
voting all their efforts to war-relief 
this year, in contra-distinction to the 
Suffragists. At the Anti-Suffrage 
performance of ‘‘A Royal Family’”’ 
in Boston this week, the entire pro- 
ceeds go to the Anti-Suffrage Ass’n! 
| Verbum sat sapienti! 
“ —Ijouie R. Stanwood. 
