"él 
i th le ete i el ie i a ee Le ae, 
7 
> ah 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 9 
MANCHESTER 
Miss Dora Marshall, who opened 
the first year of her course of study 
at Wheaton Seminary this term, 
came home Wednesday to attend 
the wedding of her cousin. 
Miss Molly McNeary, the popu- 
lar clerk in the dry goods store of 
Miss Elizabeth Lethbridge, is to 
spend the holiday and week end 
with relatives at Neponset. 
Mrs. Alice Wheaton is spending 
a week with her sister, Mrs. Har- 
vard Perkins of Beverly. 
Citizen’s Day Observances at 
Baptist Church. 
Sunday evening a very interesting 
service was held at the Baptist 
church, Manchester, in observance 
of Citizen’s Day.- The Grand Army 
men, Sons of Veterans, and _ the 
members of the Woman’s Relief 
Corps were invited to attend in a 
body, and a goodly number turned 
out. Mrs. Alice Lee sang “The 
Plains of Peace’ and Rev. A. G. 
Warner preached a most interesting 
sermon on “Citizen’s Day,” giving 
the origin of the day and its further 
history. President Lincoln was the 
founder of the idea of a day which 
should be set apart to honor the 
citizens, as so many days are really 
in honor of the bravery of the 
soldiers. Rev. Mr. Warner graphi- 
cally pointed out that true courage 
sometimes lies, not in fighting for 
one’s country, but in steadfastly 
doing the duties of a citizen. As an 
example, he cited the instance of a 
young man, who participated in the 
charge up San Juan Hill in the 
Spanish war. Now a rising lawyer 
in New York, the ex-soldier said 
that it took less courage to him to 
rush up San Juan in company with 
his fellow men and behind stirring 
music, than it did several years later 
during his start in the law practice, 
when he was offered a tempting sum 
for his vote for a certain politician. 
For further examples, Rev. Mr.. 
Warner took some of the problems 
of the Lawrence strike, which re- 
sulted in the pending trial of Ettor 
for manslaughter, and some of the 
crimes nearer home. The duty of a 
citizen, he showed, was often hard 
to see in these days of complex laws 
and difficult situations. All pro- 
nounced the sermon one of Mr. 
Warner’s finest and those who 
crowded the church to its utmost 
capacity attended one of the best 
special services Manchester has 
heard for some time. 
If Your Voice Gets In, You Win 
A Palmer, (Mass. subscriber told this story: 
66 ° . . 
I got word of a possible big contract in Western New York, packed 
my grip, and started on the night train. All the next day I waited 
around that city, trying to see the head of the frm. He was busy—- 
busy. 1 couldn’t get at him. When night came I went home 
disgusted. 
ce 
As my eyes rested on the telephone in my office the next morning, 
I said to myself: Wonder if you couldn’t get me into that office—get 
my voice where I can’t go myself?’ 
“Tt could and did. Within half an hour fr thet : 
call, I was awarded the contract.’’ grt ie. ume 1 Date inthe 
The announcement of a long distant call will usually secure a hear- 
ing. Many busy men prefef to transact business by telephone. 
It enables them to concentrate, to escape the emphasis of person- 
alities, and to make quick decisions. 
Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Station 
New England Telephone 
and Telegraph Company 
Fine Wedding Silverware 
What could be more appropriate than Silverware asa Wedding Gift for the 
young bride and groom? 4Certainly nothing offers greater variety to choose 
from ora happier combination of usefulness, beauty, and real worth. 4@Rut 
there must be no doubt about its quality. In anticipation of the Weduing season 
we have gathered together an assortment of special pieces, in both sterling silver 
and fine quality plate, from which you will have no difficulty in selecting some- 
thing just to your fancy. 4Prices range as low as 50c and $1.00, and there’s 
through-and-through quality in every piece we se.l ‘ 
W. F. Chisholm & Son  welers: 161 Main street 
ESTABLISHED 1874 Gloucester, Mass. 
Comforters and blankets at E. A. 
WEAR (i) RUBBERS hha 
This Winter Lethbridge’s. x 
