18 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
SS 
Be Thankful 
That your financial condition is not so strain- 
ed as that of many in the warring countries. 
We should plan all the harder, and more 
cheerfully, to lay aside a little surplus. 
THE MANCHESTER 
TRUST COMPANY 
Banking hours 8:30-2:30; Sats. 8:30-1; Sat. Ev’gs (deposit only) 7-8 
KAYMOND C. ALLEN 
Assoc. Mem. Am. Soc. C. E. 
Member Boston Soc. C. E. 
CIVAE SEAN GPIN EE Bsr 
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 
ine. ae eaaSueinice Residence 
Ty hs 
Do not leave your valuable clocks through the winter without protection 
from the cold and dampness of an unoccupied house. 
Such treatment 
We will call for them, run them through the winter in a warm dry 
room and return them in good order in the spring. Charges Reasonable 
F. S. Thompson, seweter 
164 Main Street, | ———s—s—s«dO4 Main Street, Gloucester | 
will seriously affect the time-keeping quality of your clocks and may 
ruin them. 
“WARS OF THE WORLD” AT “Wane! OF THE WORLD! uate Hipeosis (ear eea nee cen Tue: 
DROME 
The Hippodrome, New York, has 
“gone and done it again.’ That is 
the universal verdict on the new pro- 
duction, “Wars of the World,” which 
opened at the gigantic playhouse last 
week, and which has now entered up- 
on a career of unexampled prosperity. 
“Wars of the World” is a scenic 
pageant that carries its spectators 
from the “dawn of civilization’ down 
to the centuries when the sword was 
strong into the decades when class 
ruled | mass to the present struggle for 
equal rights and even farther. The 
spectacle is not any attempt to capi- 
talize the present war, in Europe. 
Throughout its entire length there is 
no single reference to any of the pre- 
sent contending parties, On the con- 
trary, it is a plea for universal peace, 
and to that extent has timely interest. 
The “chorus” of the ‘piece, a being 
personifying History, calls War the 
last great obstacle between civiliza- 
tion and the millennium, and this note 
is struck repeatedly throughout the 
performance. Over a thousand peo- 
ple and one hundred animals are em- 
ployed throughout the production. 
Arthur Voegtlin, William J. Wil- 
son and Manuel Klein are the three 
presiding spirits of the Hippodrome 
responsibile for this year’s magnifi- 
cent spectacle. It is divided into 
three acts and many episodes. 
Get your gloves cleaned by the 
Parisian Laundry. E: A. Lethbridge, 
agent, adv, 
MANCHESTER 
Miss Josephine Chamberlain of 
Boston was in town Sunday a guest 
of Miss Hazel Robbins. 
Miss Estelle Hoff of Titusville, Pa., 
is visiting her sister, Mrs. Hans Dahl, 
Washington st. 
Miss Ethel Hooper is teacher of 
Modern Languages at the High 
school at Winthrop. 
Men’s Elite Shoes for fall and win-— 
ter wear at Walt Bell’s, Central 
Sq. adv. 
Patrick H. BoyLE OF MANCHESTER, 
AS Practica, Porirrics Skks Him 
From a recent issue of Practical 
Politics we reprint the following: 
“One of the oldest members of the 
house in point of years is Rep. Pat- 
rick H. Boyle, a republican from 
Manchester-by-the-Sea. Mr. Boyle 
belongs to the republican party, and 
has figured prominently in its activi- 
ties in his home town for several 
years, and is now chairman of the 
republican town committee. Mr. 
Boyle is this fall a candidate for Sen- 
ator from the 3rd Essex district, and 
on his record as a careful, conscien- 
tious and conservative legislator 
should have little difficulty in winning 
the seat from Sen. Norwood, who 
has had it for several years and 
shows a keen desire to continue in the 
place indefinitely. 
“As clerk of the legislative com- 
mittee on water supply, Rep. Boyle 
had a great deal of work to do, dur- 
ing the past season as the committee 
sat almost daily from the opening of 
the session on matters relating to 
water supply and other town affairs 
in many parts of the commonwealth. 
“Of special interest to Mr. Boyle 
was a bill, which he ‘“‘fathered” on be- 
half of the Gloucester Master Ma- 
riner Association, and which pro- 
vides that all fresh fish shall be sold 
by weight. This bill particularly 
affects fishermen in Gloucester. He 
took an active interest in many of the 
big general problems of the year. 
“This is Mr. Boyle’s second year 
in the house. Besides serving on the 
water supply committee, he gave 
much of his time to the committee on 
counties, which considered many im- 
portant matters. 
“In local political and social affairs 
Rep. Boyle is a recognized leader, be- 
ing a prominent meniner of the Pil- 
grin Fathers organization, Masco- 
nomo Council of Knights of Colum- 
bus. He is proprietor of a livery 
stable. He was born in Ireland, Dec. 
20, 1849, but came to this country 
when, in his teens and graduated from 
the public schools in Manchester,” 
