Honourable Mrs. Garry, Pasture 
Wolf Run K291.8 
Brought to the Front K291.9 
_ Mission of Black Rifle K291.10 
Forest Glen K2o1.11 
Burying the Hatchet K2g1.12 
Heroine in Bronze, Allen A42.10 
P293.5 
Lost World, Doyle D75.25 
Marshal, The, Andrews A568.5 
Martha By-the-Day, Lippman n 
1766.1 
Potter and the Clay, Peterson 
P485.2 
Unknown Quantity, Van Dyke 
V248.3 
MANCHESTER CHURCHES. 
ORTHODOX CONGREGA- 
TIONAL—Rev. L. H. Ruge, pastor. 
Sunday morning worship, with  ser- 
mon, 10:45. Bible school 12:00. 
Christian Endeavor society 6:00 p. m. 
Evening worship with sermon, 7:00. 
Prayer meeting Tuesday, 7:30 in the 
chapel. Woman’s Missionary society 
the 1st Thursday of each month. Sit- 
tings can be obtained of A. S. Jewett. 
BAPTIST CHURCH—Rev. A. G. 
Warner, pastor. Public worship, 
10:45 a.m. Bible school, 12:15, ves- 
try. Men’s class, 12:15, auditorium. 
Young People’s union, 6:00. Even- 
ing service, 7:00. Prayer meeting 
Friday evening at 7:30. Communion 
first Sunday in the month. All seats 
are free at every service. 
SACRED HEART—Rev. Mark Sul- 
livan, pastor. Masses, 8:00 and 10:00 
o'clock. Sunday school at 2:30 o’clock. 
Rosary, Instruction and Benediction 
of the Blessed Sacrament, 3:30 
o'clock. Weel days—Morning mass 
at 7:30 o’clock. Advanced class Fri- 
day evening at 7:30 o’clock. 
Mrs. Alice Lee was soloist at the 
Bantist church last Sunday. 
The Junior Union of the Baptist 
church is to hold a social tomorrow 
‘afternoon. 
A union service will be held by the 
Senier and Junior Unions of the Bap- 
tist church Sunday afternoon at 3.30 
o’clock. 
The annual Union Thanksgiving 
service will be held by the Congrega- 
tional and Baptist churches in the 
vestry of the Baptist church Wednes- 
day evening, Nov. 27, at 7.30 o’clock, 
and will take the form of a union 
Thanksgiving prayer service. 
Rev, A. G. Warner will preach 
Sunday morning, at the Baptist 
church, on “Thanksgiving ;” his even- 
ing subject will be “The New Dress.” 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
“IF I WERE YOU.” 
NotewortHy Appress By WALTER 
Nucent at Woman’s Crus. 
When the Manchester Woman’s 
club met in the Chapel Tuesday after- 
non an exceptionally large atten- 
dance was present to hear the Rev. 
Walter Nugent of Newburyport, the 
speaker of the afternon, a lecturer of 
well known ability. Rev. Mr. Nu- 
gent took as his theme: “If I Were 
You.” At the outset he spoke of the 
conception of true life by different 
people. Some seek the attainment of 
wealth, some social, some _ political 
position. All of these, said Mr. Nu- 
gent are false standards. To do one’s 
level best in whatever sphere of life 
one is placed is true living. The best 
definition of life that has ever been 
given, the speaker said, is the words 
of the Master, “She hath done what 
she could.” If each individual uses 
all his privileges and opportunities 
for the best ends possible, he has at- 
tained true life. The preacher stowed 
away in an obscure parish daily do- 
ing his best for those about him, 
preaching the gospel the best wey he 
knows is really living; the farmer who 
has, in the forward march of civiliza- 
tion, gone to a new land to get his 
living from the soil may live as wise- 
ly and as serviceably as his brother, 
the modern farmer, who is using all 
the devices which this age provides 
while he is struggling along with the 
old implements of toil. Even the man 
who sweeps our city streets, if he is 
doing his work as best he can, is liv- 
ing the true life just as much as the 
President of the United States, and 
more so if that President is not doing 
his level best and the street cleaner is. 
In the life of the average man, the 
conflict which he fights between the 
right and wrong will never be known 
to the world; whether he takes the 
right or wrong course the world will 
never know; yet a man can be truly 
great if he never comes into the light 
of the public eye. Rev. Mr. Nugent 
quoted from Mathew Arnold and 
from Gray’s “Elegy Written in a 
Country Churchyard,” to illustrate his 
point. Arnold, always the pessimist, 
looks upon man’s struggle for the 
right as in vain, because the world 
does not heed, but in the peasant 
graves of the country churchyard, 
Gray saw dead heroes of whose strug- 
gles the world would never hear. 
“Tf I Were You,” said the speaker, 
“T should choose principle rather 
than policy.” He told of President 
Harper of the University of Chicago, 
9 
who, having accepted a fund from 
John D. Rockfeller for the Universi, 
ty, died poor and a fund was raised 
for his widow that she might spend 
the rest of her days on the campus. 
All great men have been men of 
principle rather than of policy. Rev. 
Mr. Nugent spoke at some length of 
Martin Luther, to whose moral cour- 
age in braving the most powerful man 
of the age, the Pope, is largely due 
the religious freedom of _ to-day. 
Against the advice of his friends Lu- 
ther chose his course and although he 
paid for it with his life, the world 
could have never paid him the tri- 
bute it does to-day had he chosen pol- 
icy instead of principle. The man of 
nolicy is like a sailing vessel; every- 
thing goes smoothly when sailing with 
the tide and wind but if the tide or 
wind changes, the vessel is in trouble 
immediately. The man of principle 
is like a steam vessel, making progress 
whether the elements be with or 
against him. 
Rev. Mr. Nugent’s address received 
enthusiastic applause from the many 
who had come to hear him speak. The 
meeting adjourned to meet Miss Car- 
ie Allen, the hostess for the afternoon. 
MANCHESTER'S BANK AND CORPORA- 
TION TAX. 
The town of Manchester receives 
through the tax commissioners’ office 
for the current year the sum of $58,- 
681.44 divided as follows: Public ser- 
vice and business corporations, $50,- 
022.98, National bank tax, $8,658.46. 
Total $58,681.44. 
The corporation books show the 
following amount of taxes assessed 
to local business firms incorporated 
under the laws of Massachusetts and 
whose stockholders reside in this 
town: 
Edward S. Bradley Co., of Man- 
ter, Edw. S. Bradley, Treas., $23.46; 
Green & Swett Co.. Boston and Man- 
chester, Fred K. Swett, ‘Treas., 
$202.01; North Shore Breeze Co., 
Manchester, J. Alex Lodge, Treas. 
$25.15; Samuel Knight & Sons, Man- 
chester, Geo. L. Knight, Treas. 
$94.79; Smith’s Express Co., Man- 
chester, Frederick J. Merrill, Treas. 
$66.48; Walen Drug Co., Manches- 
ter, Alfred Walen, Treas., $17.97. 
The Men’s Brotherhood will hold 
its second semi-‘ronthly meeting in 
the Baptist church vestry, Monday 
evening, Nov. 25, at 7.30. An inter- 
esting speaker is assured. All men 
are cordially invited. 
