20 
CHURCH NOTES 
Manchester 
Congregational church, Rev. C. 
Arthur Lincoln, pastor. Morning 
worship at 10.45 ; evening service at 7 
o’clock. Sermons by the pastor. 
Baptist church, Rev. Edward Her- 
sey Brewster, pastor. Morning wor- 
ship at 10.45. People’s evening ser- 
vice of song and praise at 7 o'clock. 
Church of the Sacred Heart, Rev. 
William F. Powers, pastor. Mass 
daily at 7.30 a.m. Sundays: Mass at 
9 and 10.30 o'clock am.; Sunday 
school 2 p.m.; Vespers at 7.30 p.m. 
“New Relations” will be the sub- 
ject of Rev. E. H. Brewster’s sermon 
tomorrow morning. In the evening 
he will give the fifth in the series of 
sermons on Elijah—‘In the Shade of 
the Junipers.”’ 
Mr. Brewster, with his mother, has 
been spending the week in Taunton 
with relatives. Very much fatigued 
in general and subject to frequent 
attacks of pleurisy, his health has not 
been of the best recently. Last Sun- 
day evening he was unable to attend 
the services and he left Monday for a 
week’s respite from his duties. Mr. 
Brewster writes he is feeling better 
and will preach as usual tomorrow. 
Rev. Fr. Powers will move into the 
parochial residence on Central street 
next week. The house has_ been 
equipped with heat and with electric 
lights, and will be quite well suited 
for the purpose for which it is to be 
used. 
There will be a union young people’s 
service at the Baptist church tomor- 
row evening, to be led by Miss Ger- 
trude B. Goldsmith. Topic: “How 
Finding Christ Changes the Life.” 
Ref.: Matt. 13:44-46. 
The Ladies’ sodality of the Sacred 
Heart church are to give a series of 
whist parties, Tuesday evenings, in 
Carpenters’ hall, beginning next Tues- 
- day, Jan.9. Admission, 10 and 15 
cents for ladies and gents, respect- 
ively. 
Owing to various reasons the date 
of the annual social reunion and roll- 
call of the Congregational church, 
announced for next week, has been 
postponed. It will probably be held 
the latter part of this month. 
The annual business meeting of the 
Baptist church, called for last Wednes- 
day evening, was postponed till two 
weeks from last night, after transact- 
ing a little business. These officers 
were elected: J. Davis Baker, clerk; 
Robert Baker, auditor; T. B. Stone, 
treasurer, and Mrs. Levi A. Dunn, 
registrar. The matter of supper and 
roll-call will be decided later. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Jan. 6, 1906 
Sg ea NS es Se Be Aaa ae se 
Remover of HousejWaste and Ashes. 
Jobbing and Expressing 
H. A. BURCHSTEAD, Manager 
Board for Horses. 
Horse Clipping. Order Box with Loomis, the Jeweler. 
P.O. Address, BOX 409, MANCHESTER, MASS. 
Rev. C. A. Lincoln preached at the 
Baptist church last. Sunday evening, 
at a union meeting, taking his text 
from Isa. 64:6—‘‘We all fade as a 
leaf.”’ The watch night services which 
followed were in charge of the young 
people and deacons, and Mr. Lincoln 
had chargeof the consecration service 
from 11 to 12 o’clock. 
The ladies of the Baptist church 
held a quilting bee in the vestry 
Wednesday. 
Great reduction in Millinery. Mlle 
Keyou, 113 Main street, Gloucester. * 
Raymond Hitchcock’s Second Success- 
ful Week at the Termont Theatre 
The second week of ‘(The Galloper”’ 
at the Tremont theatre started off 
auspiciously on Monday ‘night. The 
success of Raymond Hitchcock in the 
new Richard Harding Davis farce is a 
certainty.. The audiences have well- 
nigh tested the capacity of the theatre 
at every performance. Both star and 
principals receive repeated) curtain 
calls after each act, and Mr. Hitch- 
cock has been obliged to address his 
audience at every performance. <A 
Hitchcock curtain speech is in itself 
almost worth the price of admission. 
The Boston press has enthusiastically 
endorsed the play, the star, the com- 
pany and the production, and it is 
doubtful if a more generally successful 
farce has been presented in a Boston 
theatre in years. For a genuine even- 
ing's entertainment the admonition is 
go see Hitchcock in “The Galloper.”’ 
Only this week and next remain. 
Sey ei) ee 
Titus Adv. 
PACA Ec 
Manchester Public Library 
The Public Library will be open until First 
of May every Monday, Wednesday, Thurs- 
day and Saturday afternoons from 2 to5, and 
Saturday evenings from 6.30 to 8.30 o’clock. 
Sundays and Holidays are excepted. 
Per order, 
TRUSTEES. 
GROUND FLOOR TELEPHONE 
STUDIO. 53-5 
ROBERT W. PHELPS, 
NEW Y.M.C.A. BUILDING, 
GLOUCESTER, : : MASS. 
PHOTOGRAPHER. ART STORE 
We make a Specialty of 
HOUSE SAFES 
Did you ever realize that a $25 
House Safe will save you $250? 
Don’t buy the safe after the 
burglar has done his work. We 
solicit correspondence. 
A. B. CURTIS 
98 Sudbury Street, Boston. 
J. M. PUBLICOVER. 
= W. B. PUBLICOVER. 
PUBLICOVER BROS. 
Contractors I) Builders 
Special Attention given to Jobbing. 
Furniture Repaired, Etc. 
All Work Neatly and Promptly Done. 
SHOP, HALE STREET, BEVERLY FARMS. 
P.O. Box 74, Beverly Farms, Mass. 
OLIVER T. ROBERTS. 
Telephone Connection. 
WILLIAM HOARE. 
ROBERTS & HOARE, 
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS 
Contract Work a specialty. 
Particular attention paid to Jobbing. 
TELEPHONE CONNECTION. 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA. 
