20 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Mt. Pleasant Dairy 
R. & L.. BAKER, 
base MILK 
P. O. Box 129 
Teaming done to order. 
Gravel and Rough Stone. 
MANCHESTER, ~ - 
Telephone Connection 
MASS. 
EDWARD A. LANE 
2% HOUSE, SIGN AND CARRIAGE “PAINTER 22% 
DECORATOR AND PAPER HANGER 
Dealer in Paints, Oils, Paper Hangings, 
dow Shades, Blindsand Windows. 
Tel. Con. MANCHESTER AND HAMILTON 
FRANK H. DENNIS: 
“ GROCER 
Telephone 24-3 
16 School St., -- —~ Manchester 
Win- 
Cc. L. CRAFTS. 
CARPENTER AND BUILDER 
Special Attention Given to Jobbing. 
MANCHESTER, - - . MASS. 
Telephone 139-4. 
George 5. dinnicks, 
MASON BUILDER 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA. 
EDWARD S. KNIGHT, 
FLORIST 
Dealer in fine plants, bulbs and seeds. 
FLOWERS for all occasions. 
44 SCHOOL STREET, - - - MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA. 
Manchester, Magnolia, Beverly Farms, Boston 
Smith’s Express Company 
F. J. MERRILL, Proprietor. 
Principal Boston Office: 32 Court Square. 
Telephones: Boston,Main 489; Manchester 11-5 
FIRST-CLASS STORAGE FOR FURNITURE. 
SEPARATE ROOMS UNDER LOCK 
MANCHESTER - - 
SEA FOOD OF 
F E & MH ALL KINDS 
First Class Oysters 
delivered Saturdays 
ALEX. CARTER, PINE STREET, 
MASS. 
MANCHESTER 
Removal of Night Soil 
Application for the removal of the con- 
tents ofcesspools and grease traps should 
be made to S. ALBERT SINNICKS, 
Per order the Board of Health 
THOUGHTS HERE AND THERE 
Continued from page J 
cause its absence often occasions much 
unnecessary pain. 
The unfortunate, whether in body or 
mind or estate, have a special claim upon 
our thoughtfullness; the good book de- 
clares, ‘* Blessed is he that considereth the 
poor;’’ considerateness is often more 
needed than alms-giving, and it will 
prompt to alms-giving when that is re- 
quired and is possible. 
Indiscriminate and unintelligent giving 
often causes more evils than it cures; 
hence the wisdom at times of employing 
almoners in the bestowal of gifts. 
But there is danger if the giving is 
through others that it will lack the per- 
sonal, human element that is often the 
best part of it; the giver should as far as 
possible give himself with his gifts; that 
often far more than doubles the real 
value of the gift, and it is such giving es- 
pecially that is ‘‘ twice blest.’’ 
‘There are many problems connected 
with the administration of help to the 
poor and unfortunate which call for wis- 
dom as well as pity, for the cool head as 
well as the warm heart; and yet it is 
better to give sometimes ‘unwisely and 
from mere impulse than not to give at 
all. 
One of the worst things for us is to 
allows the flow of kindly beneficence to 
dry up; to make giving a matter of cold 
calculation, or to base it altogether upon 
worthiness; this is not the manner of 
him who maketh his sun to shine upon 
the evil and the good and sendeth rain 
upon the just and the unjust. 
No doubt that on the whole less harm 
is done in the world by the warm- 
hearted, blundering man than by the 
frigid and always correct man. 
‘The tendency in our day is to carry on 
charitable and even religious work by 
machinery, or in a merely mechanical 
and perfunctory way; essays to do good 
should always have in them the feeling, 
pulsing heart, under the guidance, it is 
true, of a sound intelligence, a level 
judgment. 
uv wu WwW 
To avoid the extremes of a too domi- 
nant intellectualism on the one hand, and 
an overpowering emotionalism on the 
other, is to-steer clear of both Scylla and 
Charybdis in the conduct of life. 
ww ow 
It is wonderful sometimes to see how 
matters that seem at first very much 
muddled often clear themselves in dis- 
cussion, as in town-meeting, for example; 
as turbid waters deposit their detritus in 
flowing a few rods or miles. If the pub- 
lic mind is not to hold its errors and ig- 
norance in solution, it must not be left to 
stagnate; the Middle Ages are an object 
lesson in that for all time. 
KNIGHT'S EXPRESS > 
Manchester, Beverly 
Farms, Prides Cross- 
ing, "Beverly and 
Salem, 
All orders left at Sheldon’s M’k’t., ® 
> 
L. W. Floyd’s, G. W. Hooper’s, 
Frank H. Dennis’, Bullock Bros’, 
B. 8. Bullock’s, Manchester; or 
A, Standley’s and the Railroad sta- 
tion, Beverly Farms, will be 
promptly attended to. 
q 
f 
JOHN SCOTT 
HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTER 
Paper Hanger and Decorater 
DEALER IN 
Paints, Oils, Varnish and Glass 
Summer Street, Manchester, Mass. 
Tel. 156-3 (Opp. electric light sta.) 
JOSEPH K. DUSTIN 
Teacher of PIANO 
Two days in town each week. Address 
LANESVILLE, MASS. 
Telephone 
The Publisher's 
Glaims Sustained 
UNITED STATES COURT OF CLAIMS 
The Publishers of Webster’s International 
Dictionary allege that it ‘is, in fact,the popu- 
lar Unabridged thoroughly re-edited in even 
detail, and vastly enriched in every part, wit 
the purpose of adapting it to mect the larger 
ni severer requirements of another genera- 
ion. 
We are of the opinion that this allegation 
most ies & and accuratcly dcscribes the 
work that has been accomplished and the 
result that has been reached. Tho Dictionary, 
as it now stands, has been thoroughly re- 
edited in every detail, has been corrected in 
Abt AL part, and is admirably adapted to meet 
the larger and severer requirements of a 
generation which demands more of popular 
philologicai knowledge than any generation 
that the world hasevcr contained. 
It is perhaps necdlecs to add that we refer 
to the dictionary in our judicial work ascot 
the highest authority in accuracy of detini- 
tion; and that in the future as inthe past it 
will be the source of constant reference. 
CHARLES C. NOTT, Chief Justice. 
LAWRENCE WELDON, 
JOHN DAV 
STANTON fi PRELLE 
CHARLES B, LIOWRY, 
udges, 
The above refers to WEBSTER’S 
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 
THE GRAND PRIZE 
(the highest award) was riven 19 the Interna- 
tional at the World’s lair, &t. Louis. 
GET THE LATEST AND BEST 
You will be interested in our 
specimen pages, sent free. 
G. & C. MERRIAM CO.,, 
PUBLISHERS, 
SPRINGFIELD, MAS8S8, 
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WEBSTERS 
Me ha PP sya 
Agent Salem Steam Laundry. ® ; 
* 
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Fe a ed i i aa ae aden de uke aia el Ai 
