NORTH SHORE BREEZE G 
Aug. 14. Richard Stone, 74 2 22 14, Alfred N. Patter- Cinders, Weir. 
8. John W. Carter, 68 8 12 son, 1 6 21 College Years, Paine. 
10. John W. Pitman, 37 8 i4 Nov. 7. Herbert B. Hinch- Commodore, The, Peterson. 
23. James H. Ireland, 86 2 9 liffe, 38 11 13 Crooked Trails, Remington. 
Sept. 20. Alice Munroe 11. Samuel Colby Rowe, 25 4 26 Dorothy Dainty’s Visit, Brooks. 
Burnham, Liye} PAs es! 14. George A. Rowe, 79 1 26 Elizabeth, Betsy and Bess— 
20. John C. Weir, ONO eC 17. Benjamin C. Mar- Schoolmates, Blanchard. 
Oct. 1. Sarah W. Giles, (sy) ak ble, 80 11 13 Gaunt Gray Wolf, Wallace. 
8. John Heath, gay ALE 30. Lydia Woodbury, 85 3 2 Grannis of the Fifth, Pier. 
11. Eliza Ann Gregory, 73 1 17 #£Dec. 15. Myron D. Eyberse, 2 26 Hands of Esau, Deland. 
Honorable Percival, Rice. 
Horsemen of the Plains, Altsheler. 
How it Happened, Bosher, 
NEW BOOKS Tan Hardy, Currey. 
In Camp at Fort Brady, Theiss. 
‘ ‘ Jim Davis, Masefield. 
Recently Added to Manchester Public Library hay Ade tates Peary, 
Last Invasion, Haines. 
Left End Edwards Barbour. 
Accounts, Cole. How to Make Things, Williams. Tjioht of Western Stars ne 
American Girl’s Handy Book, Beard. How to Understand Electrical Tost in the Fur Country, Lange. 
Animal Experimentation and Work, Onken & Baker. Yove Insurance ; Biggers, 
Medical Progress, Keen. Iceland, Russell. Lucky Stone, Brown. 
Bible For Young People, Jack of all Trades, Beard. Making Mary Lizzie Happy, Rhoades. 
Book of Indian Braves, Sweetser. Letters of Sarah Orne Jewett, Fields. fark Tddiin thew Back 
Boy Craftsman, Hall. Myths Every Child Should Woods, Kelland. 
Boy Pioneers, Beard. Know, Mabie. Midshipman in the Pacific, Brady. 
Children’s Parties, Crozier. One I Knew the Best of All, Burnett. Weq Brewster’s Caribou 
““Dame Curtsey’s’’ Party Practical Sewing and Dress- Hunt, Hawkins. 
Pastimes For the Up- making, Allington. Night Watches, Jacobs. 
to-date Hostess, Glover. Recreations for Girls, Beard. Bacraers Wife, Arnin. 
Easy Meals, Benton. Saturday Mornings, Benton. Pitcher Pollock, Mathewson. 
Elementary Modern Chem- Varieties of Religious Experi- Redney McGaw, McFarlane. 
istry, Ostwald & Morse. ence, James. Scouting With Daniel Boone, 
Fighting a Fire, Hill. oe Tomlinson. 
Floor Games, Wells. : : Fiction. Three Years Behind the Guns, Tisdale. 
Gilbert and Sullivan ane oe oe aaa Cana a iat Tom Paulding, Matthews. 
Their Operas, Cellier ridgeman. oy Emigrants, rooks. Sigt ; 
Handy Boy ’ © Hall. Boy Fugitives in Mexico, ees Tommy Remington’s Battle, Stevenson. 
Harper’s Aircraft Book, Verrill. Boy Scouts in the White Trawler, The, Connolly. 
Harper’s Wireless Book, Verrill. Mountains, Eaton. Young Sharp Shooter at 
Home Book of Great Paintings, Hurll. Cab and Caboose, Munroe. Antietam, Tomlinson. 
HOME-MAKING 
SuBJECT OF TALK BEFORE MANCHES- 
TER WoMAN’S CLUB. 
The regular semi-monthy meeting 
of the Manchester Woman’s club was 
held Tuesday afternoon of this week 
at the Congregational chapel. Miss 
Grace Merrill, who is at home from 
Abbott for the Christmas holidays, 
and Miss ‘Dora Marshall, who is 
studing at The New England Conser- 
vatory of Music at Boston, played a 
piano duet, Ruy Blas, an overture by 
Mendelssohn, which was so well re- 
ceived that they responded with an 
encore, Spanish Waltz, by G. Laza- 
tus. The speaker of the afternoon, 
Mrs. Margaret Stannard of Boston, 
who was secured for this meeting by 
the Home Ecomomics Department of 
the Massachusetts Federation of Wo- 
men’s clubs was then introduced by 
the President, Mrs. Grace Beaton. 
Mrs. Stannard, who is the director of 
the Garland Schools for Girls in Bos- 
ton, delivered an able talk on “Educa- 
tion for Homemaking.” 
At the outset Mrs. Stannard ex- 
-pressed the hope that some day edu- 
cation for home-making would defi- 
nitely include boys as well as girls, 
thus eliminating, or at least minim- 
izing the great social dangers which 
beset the women who earn their our 
living today. 
That this change may be looked for 
Mrs. Stannard showed by a brief 
resume of the great changes which 
have come in the last one hundred 
years in the place of woman in the 
home, in colleges and professional 
schools and in the business world. In 
fact, so far has the pendulum swung, 
said Mrs. Stannard, that whereas at 
the beginning of the century, woman’s 
education was confined almost entire- 
ly to the home, school life has now 
usurped to too great a degree the 
place of home life. 
The family is not only the most 
important factor in the life of a child; 
it is also one of the oldest institutions 
in the history of man, dating back 
from the establishment of the patri- 
achial family; which was held to- 
gether by external ties, such as pro- 
tection against enemies, the gaining of 
a livelihood and religious bonds. Al- 
though the family of today is held 
together by internal bonds more than 
was the family of early history, the 
best result of each is the same—teach- 
ing the child the power to cooperate, 
to subordinate himself to a group, the 
latter one of the most important les- 
sons of life. 
In speaking of her own work, the 
speaker summed it up briefly by the 
phrase “cultivation of relationships.” 
This included the relationships of the 
home, the responsibility of the older 
towards the younger children and the 
new relationship between the man 
and woman who are not of kin. 
Homemaking is, of course, the key- 
note of all the work, which Miss Gar- 
land is teaching in her unique school. 
This includes the buying of food- 
stuffs, cooking, study of textiles, 
which is necessary to the intelligent 
buying of clothing, the furnishing of 
a house, the apportionment of the 
family income, and the scientific 
foundation for all branches which can 
be taught only by applied sciences. 
During the social hour which fol- 
lowed Mrs. Stannard’s talk afternoon 
tea was served. Mrs. William W. 
Hoare was hostess. 
When you think of painting think 
of Tappan, 17 Bridge street, Man- 
chester. adv. 
Children’s Educator shoes at Wait 
Bell’s, Central sq. adv, 
