20 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
QUR FIFTH ANNIVERSARY 
On May First, Nineteen Hundred Eleven, the 
Doors of the Manchester Trust Company Were 
Thrown Open for Business. 
Our Steady Growth in Efficiency, 
Size and 
Friends is a Source of Pleasure and Pride to 
All of Us in Manchester. 
THE 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) 
RAYMOND C. ALLEN 
Assoc. Mem. Am. Soc. C. E. 
CIVIL ENGINEER 
Member Boston Soc. C. E. 
Investigations and Reports—Design and Superintendence of Con- 
struction—Design of Roads and Avenues—Surveys and Estimates. 
ESTABLISHED 1397 
Lee’s Block, Manchester 
:: :: 3: Tel. 73-R and W 
MANCHESTER 
Miss Kathleen Slade visited rela- 
tives in Cambridge last week. 
Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Purington 
spent Easter in Andover with the 
former’s sister and family. 
Mrs. Bert Rogers, Bridge street, 
is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
Thomas Cleveland, in Yarmouth, N. 
S., for a month. 
Fresh Frozen Herring at Swett’s 
Fish Market. adv. 
os $3 OK 
Manchester 
Request. 
Office: 
21 GUMMER STREET 
QHOLOBLOKLOBVOVOVWOUOWOWOWO BOB OBO BOOS & 
BWOWMOUOBVOBVOKOBVOROBOBOBOBOS 
ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER 
Estimates on Cable Construction Furnished on 
a 
‘'axi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
P. H. Boyle has added two Ford 
taxicabs to his livery equipment. 
The B. & M. drawbridge was raised, 
oiled and tested Tuesday morning in 
preparation for summer. 
Because Charles E. Bell was called 
to Merrimac by the death of Mrs. 
Bell’s father, the bowling match, 
which Walter Bell and Austin Jones 
were to roll with Charles Bell and 
Lewis Hutchinson last evening, has 
been postponed until next Thursday, 
WOWORVOVORVOBVOBOBOVOBOS 
Electric Co. 
Telephone 168W 
T. A. LEES, Manager 
Been C uch cas ceonsucnononcrosone: 
QMOROMOMOVONMORORORORORORORKOUONOVOMOMOVOVOMOMONONOBO? ZomoNon 
BROTHERHOOD MEETING 
Boston DEputy FIRE CHIEF RELATES 
EXPERIENCES OF 34 YEARS AS. A 
Fire FIGHTER. 
Deputy Chief Daniel F. Sennott of 
the Boston Fire Department, 34 years 
a fire fighter, who has been through 
many of Boston’s worst fires in that 
period, spoke to the largest gathering 
of the Brotherhood this season, in the 
Manchester Baptist church on Mon- 
day evening. The attendance was 
235. Mr. Sennott \-desenibedetne 
equipment of the Boston department 
and told of its development from the 
“hand tub” of 1792 to the motor 
driven, nine-ton steamers of today. 
“We have everything to fight fire 
with,” said Mr. Sennott. “What we 
need most of all is to prevent fires.” 
The meeting was formally desig- 
nated as ‘‘firemen’s night” and invita- 
tions to the officers and members of — 
the fire departments of Rockport, 
Gloucester, Beverly and Beverly 
Farms were accepted by representa- 
tives of those departments. Quite a 
large number from Beverly Farms 
was in attendance. 
As a prelude to the lecture Allyn 
Brown of Gloucester, formerly organ- 
ist at the Manchester Baptist church, 
gave an organ recital, which it was 
regretted could not be extended over 
a longer period, so thoroughly was it 
enjoyed. 
Before showing upon the screen 
the scores of fire scenes, Deputy 
Chief Sennott talked a few minutes 
on fire prevention and gave advice 
regarding the handling of a fire at the 
beginning and before the arrival of 
the firemen. He dwelt upon the im- 
portance of sounding an alarm the 
instant the fire is discovered. Win- 
dows should never be thrown open, 
_ he said, as the air feeds and fans the 
flames. Firemen sometimes break in 
windows, but they do this only when 
they have the equipment at hand to 
back them up. In Boston the firemen 
are as careful of the property in a 
tenement district as they are of a 
residence in the Back Bay. ‘The men 
and officers are responsible to their 
superior officers for any unnecessary 
damage. 
Views of the great Boston fire of 
1872 were shown, the Chelsea fire and 
a number of bad winter fires in Bos- 
ton when men, buildings and appar- 
atus were coated with ices £e Ee 
water towers, fire boats and other 
highly efficient pieces of apparatus 
were shown at work. Big fires in 
New York City were shown. Views 
of many types of apparatus used in 
this and other countries in the past 
and present were thrown on the 
April 28; 1916. 
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