NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
—— OO 
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 
TO LET FOR SUMMER, attractive cot- 
tage of 8 rooms in Manchester; modern 
throughout, near Essex County Club. 
Inquire of Mr. Lodge, The Breeze Of- 
fice, Manchester. 13tf 
APPRENTICE wanted. Girl to learn 
millinery. Apply to Mrs. Sherman, 44 
Central st., Manchester. 13-14 
WANTED—A man to go shares in a 
garden this summer. Apply C. A. 
Hatch, Manchester. 13 
6 ROOM FURNISHED cottage to let in 
Manchester. Near Essex County elub. 
Apply at Breeze Office. eitet 
TENEMENT TO LET, 11 rooms, with 
path avd two toilets, electric lights, 
furnace heat, -suitable for lodging 
house; centrally located. Also office in 
same building. Will let together or 
separate. Apply to BE. S.. Bradley, 42 
Central St., Manchester. 12tf 
EGGS for hatching; White Wyandottes 
from thoroughbred stock. Chickens for 
sale, 15¢e. apiece. Miss Wilson, 329 
Summer st., Manchester. She 
FOR RENT—Tenement of 7 rooms, with 
bath. Apply, Geo. E. Willmonton, Man- 
chester. 13 
CHAUFFEUR, competent to drive any 
kind of machine; thorough mechanic; 
careful and painstaking,—wants post 
tion on the North Shore. References. 
‘‘Chauffeur,’? The Breeze 
Address 
Office. 13tf 
CHAUFFEUR) wants position; seven 
years experience on all kinds of cars; 
Shore 
well acquainted with North 
roads; best of references from North 
Shore people. Address N. P., care 
The Breeze Office. 
| 
PILGRIM FATHERS 
Members of U. O. P. F. 
May learn something to their ad- 
vantage by addressing: 
H. P. SPARKS 
176 Federal Street - Boston 
OO 
PUBLIC HEARING. 
On petition of the New England 
-Telephone and Telegraph Company 
a public hearing will be held at the 
office of the Board of Selectmen, 
Town Hall, on Saturday, April 3rd, 
1915, at two o’clock p. m., for the 
location of twenty-nine poles on the 
following street: 
Pine Street between Bridge and 
Pleasant Streets. 
Edward S. Knight, 
Chairman of Selectmen. 
March 23, 1915. 
| DENTIST 
J. Russell MacKinnon, D. M.D. 
10 Church St., MANCHESTER Tel. 85 
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays 
Old South Building, Boston, 294 Washington St. 
Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays 
J. P. LATIONS 
CarriageBuilder-Auto Repairing 
Service Car Bodies to Order. Auto- 
mobile Painting. First-class work. 
Manchester, Mass. 
EQUAL 
Shop: Depot Square 
FROM THE WRITERS’ 
SUFFRAGE LEAGUE. 
The Writers’ League of Boston 
has sent a protest to the Whittier 
Club of Amesbury on the occasion 
of the latter club having an anti- 
Suffrage talk by Mrs. Henry ee 
White at their meeting on March 24 
(according to announcements). We 
protest that inasmuch as the noble 
poet, Whittier, was a strong Sut- 
fragist, an anti-Suffrage meeting at 
a club that bears his name is not 
only an inconsistency, but an insuit 
to his memory. The little Ames- 
bury club probably does not know 
that Mrs. White is not taken serl- 
ously in the literary world, nor that 
her anti-Suffrage speeches are full 
of inaccuracies; but that is not the 
point. The point ist bam no 
‘Whittier Club’? can with dignity 
vive a hearing to the cause of anti- 
woman, anti-freedom, anti-democ- 
racy. 
In this connection it is well to re- 
member the whole of that great 
eroup who stood, with Whittier, for 
Abolition and for Woman Suffrage, 
which included Julia Ward Howe, 
Wendell Phillips, Emerson and the 
Aleotts, George William Curtis, 
Lucy Larecom (of Beverly), ‘‘Gail 
Hamilton’’ (Abigail Dodge) (of 
Hamilton) and later Mrs. James T. 
Fields. And let me add that Mrs. 
Howe’s daughter, Maud Howe 
Elliott, is one of the honorary vice- 
presidents of our Writers’ League. 
while some of the poets of the day 
who are our members are Percy 
MacKaye, Witter Bynner, Nathan 
Haskell Dole, Josephine Preston 
Peabody, Mildred Howells. Alice 
Brown, and more. First and last, all 
the real poets have sung of human 
brotherhood and_ sisterhood, and I 
feel that all these great ones of the 
MRS. MARGARET LEE 
has opened for he season her 
HAND LAUNDRY 
72 Pleasant St,, Manchester 
: Tel. 326 W 
First Class Work Guaranteed 
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 = es 
Mass. 
Card Tables, Folding 
Chairs, Gold Chairs 
Weddings, Teas 
Dances, Lawn. Parties 
WwW. J. CREED 
Caterer 
PRIVATE WAITING 
Boston, Mass. Chambers 
Tel. 3046 Back Bay 
Beverly Cove, Mass. 
Tel. 765 
past and the present are with us in 
our protest against anti-Suffrage— 
in the name of John Greenleat 
Whittier. I will close with a quo- 
tation from his poem, ‘“The Pas-’ 
toral Letter?’ (in. which . he de- 
fended the Grimké sisters, who were 
persecuted in Massachusetts for 
speaking for the Abolition of Slav- 
ery and for Women’s Rights) : 
‘CA elorious remnant lingers yet, 
Whose lips are wet at Freedom’s 
fountains, 
The coming of whose welcome feet 
Is beautiful upon our moun- 
Paunies" 
(The whole poem should be read, 
also the one called ‘‘Lines on a Fly 
Leaf,’’? which refers to Gail Hamil- 
ton and other women.) 
—tLouie R. Stanwood, 
(Pres. Writers’ HE. 8. League. ) 
Manchetser, March 24, 1915. 
CARD OF THANKS 
Allen W. R. C. wish to thank all 
those who assisted in any way at 
the Essex County Association Day, 
Thursday, March 11. 
(Mrs.) HANNAH TAPPAN, 
Chairman Committee. 
