36 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
The Manchester Trust Company 
Capital $100,000.00 
Surplus $38,000.00 
Deposits $800,000.00 
A Manchester Bank 
Managed by Manchester Men 
Supported by Manchester Capital 
Organized to be of SERVICE to all who live 
in Manchester. 
President, Oliver 'T. Roberts 
Vice-Presidents, Roger W. Babson, William Hoare 
Secretary and Treasurer, H. W. Purington 
Directors 
Roger W. Babson 
M. J. Callahan 
E. S. Curtis 
E.-D.cEdimands 
Dr. G. W. Blaisdell M. B. Gilman 
William Hoare 
Geo. L. Knight 
Edw. A. Lane 
eas] eciVierrs 
Oliver 'T. Roberts 
George F. Willett 
Checking Accounts draw 2 per cent interest. 
Safe Deposit Boxes at $5 per year. 
Storage Vault Space at moderate rates. 
~ MANCHESTER TRUST COMPANY 
Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. 
Banking hours 8 :30-2 :30 ; Sats. 8:30-1; Sat. Ev’gs 7-8 (deposits only) 
Interest Accounts drawing 4 per cent interest. 
RAYMOND C. ALLEN 
Assoc. Mem. Am. Soc. C. E. 
Member Boston Soc. C. E. 
CIVIL ENGINEER 
Investigations and Reports—Design and Superintendence of Con- 
struction—Design of Roads and Avenues—Surveys and Estimates. 
ESTABLISHED 1897 
Lee’s Block, Manchester 
Tel. 73-R and W 
Boston THEATRE. 
New England’s greatest home of 
pictures and vaudeville, the Boston 
Theatre, continues to present the big- 
gest and longest shows of any play- 
house in the city at popular prices. 
The last three days of the week of 
April roth, the bill will be headed by 
the great moral film story, ““Unto 
Those Who Sin,” with beautiful 
Fritzi Burnnette in the title role and 
a superb cast, in five daringly sensa- 
tional parts. The vaudeville portion 
of the bill is headed by Tom McRae 
and company in the merry musical 
farce, “A Limousine Romance,” with 
a bevy of pretty girls and lots of 
good fun and catchy music. 
RECOVERED LETTER. 
Captain Daniel F. Sennott of En- 
gine 14, Boston fire department, 
dropped a letter between the walls of 
the engine house on Dec. 29, 1893. 
Deputy Chief Daniel F. Sennott of 
the Boston fire department received 
the envelope again Monday. For 
more than 22 years it remained em- 
bedded in the walls of the fire station 
located in Centre street, Roxbury. 
In 1893 the members of the Engine 
I4 company were employed during 
their spare moments in building a 
new partition wall in the engine house. 
Extensive improvements had been 
made and were completed with the 
exception of the wall. Sennott was 
then the captain in charge of the 
house and as the last bits of plaster 
were being slapped into place he sud- 
denly thought of placing a letter in- 
side the wall. Recently workmen 
started to make changes again in the 
engine house, this time to provide 
room for motor apparatus. One of 
them brought an envelope to Sennott, 
now a deputy chief. It was the one 
he had deposited in the wall in 1893. 
Sennott had forgotten the incident 
but upon breaking the seal recalled it 
immediately. In the envelope, written 
.on two sheets of paper, was the fol- 
lowing: 
“Dec. 29, 1893. The weather to- 
day is warm and it is 40 degrees 
above at the present time. There is 
a lot of sickness about. Great alarm 
on account of smallpox. We had an 
alarm from box 252 for a fire at 2757 
Washington street, not much of a 
fire. There is a lot of grippe and 
pneumonia. Superintendent of Build- 
ings Tucker has just died. The de- 
partment at present is in a good con- 
dition. The fire commissioners are: 
Robert G. Fitch, John R. Murphy, 
George Ennis. Chief of department, 
Louis P. Webber. Chief of district 
8, Edward H. Sawyer. 
(Signed) “Captain of Engine 14. 
Daniel F. Sennott.”’—Boston Post. 
Deputy-chief Sennott, the subject 
of the above story, is to address the 
men of Manchester at the Brother- 
hood meeting in the Baptist church 
on Monday evening, April 24. His 
talk on fire fighting will be illustrated 
by stereopticon views. 
“Brooks wants to sublet his apart- 
ment.” 
“Why, he called it the ideal place.” 
“T know, but the janitor doesn’t like 
the way he parts his hair.”—Judge. 
The public cigar-cutter is a health 
menace. an 
April 14, 1916. — 
EP aT oe = Pe ee ae ee eee 
‘St ae ee ee i 
