10 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Fresh Fruit! | 
Direct from the Boston Markets Daily 
Only Fruit Store on the North Shore that Guarantees Its Fruit. 
Money back if not satisfactory. 
MANCHESTER FRUIT STORE 
POST OFFICE BLOGK Phone 160 
TELEPHONES: I2W (Office), 12R (residence). Lock Box 66 
JOHN F. SCOTT 
PLUMBING AND HEATING 
PERSONAL SUPERVISION. ESTIMATES AND SPECIFICATIONS AT SHORT 
NOTICE. FIRST CLASS LABOR AND MATERIAL ONLY. TESTING OF 
DRAINAGE A SPECIALTY. 
POST OFFICE BLOCK, MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, MASS. 
Heath’s -Manchester Fish Market 
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN 
FRESH, SALT AND SMOKED FISH 
Lobsters, Clams and Oysters 
OGEAN STREET, MANCHESTER GOVE, MANGHESTER, MASS. 
JOHN HEATH, Proprietor Telephone, Manchester 192-R 
All orders promptly attended to and filled at the Lowest MARKET PRICE 
H. Higginson, Pres. W. B. Calderwood, Supt. G. W. McGuire, Treas. 
DAVID FENTON CO, Manchester-by-the-Sea 
MASS. 
Marine Railways, Boat Builders 
Paints, Oils Varnish, Cordage, and all kinds of Hardware constantly on hand 
Yacht and Boat Repairing of every description, Yacht Tenders always in stock. 
Boats stored for the winter. We carry. everything appertaining to the ‘equip- 
meut of Launches. Spray Hoods Made to Order. Boats hauled on our railways, 
towed in and out of channel, free of charge. Telephone 254 Manchester. 
SHOBOBOB NOOK OOKBOOKRBOOBEOO BO OBO OBEOOBBOO BOO BOO BOO BI 
¢ CHO. 
AZ 
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Manchester Electric Co. 
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ELFCTRIC LIGHT and POWER 
Estimates on Cable Construction Furnished on 
Request. 
Office: Telephone 168W 
21 SUMMER STRFET A. LOVERING, Manager 
OBLORLOROBOKBOBOBOBOBOWVOBWOBWOBWOMWOLWOWOLS 
¢, 
* 
CMOONRKOOKRMNOOLMOOKMOOLMLOOBRNOOMAOOUROORMOOKRKOOKRNOORROMOMORO®:. 
EQUAL SUFFRAGE LEAGUE 
MEETING HELD IN MANCHESTER IN 
INTEREST OF PEACE AND 
SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT 
A meeting in the interests of Peace 
and the Woman’s Suffrage movement 
was held at Town hall, Manchester, 
Wednesday evening with about fifty 
present, the meeting was under the 
auspices of the Manchester Equal 
Suffrage League of which Miss Louie 
R. Stanwood is president. Miss Stan- 
wodd delivered a short address of 
welcome and introduced the speakers 
of the evening, who were Mrs. W. O. 
Pinkham of Denver, Colorado, and 
Rev. Dr. Samuel McComb of Great 
Britain and Boston. Mrs. Pinkham, 
the suffrage speaker, is a woman of 
pleasing personality and one who 
made a decided impression on her 
audience. She said in part: . 
“For one who has lived many years 
in the West where women have been 
voting in the various states for per- 
iods of time varying from forty-five — 
to two or three years, ‘Votes for Wo- 
men’ has become as much of a com- 
mon-place as ‘Votes for Men.” When 
I came East about two years ago, I 
was much interested in attending 
anti-suffrage meetings and reading 
anti-suffrage literature. I learned 
some very curious things about my 
own state of Colorado and the other 
western states; it was most interest- 
ing, I can assure you. All of the 
women I know in the West study 
political questions conscientiously, 
and usually go to the polls with their 
fathers or brothers or husbands; in 
any part of the state where I had op- 
portunity to observe, the women vote 
in as large numbers as the men; the 
homes in Colorado are happy and 
well cared for; mothers love their 
children and train them with care; 
the women in the West do not look 
or dress any different from women in 
the East. 
“Moreover, thoughtful people are 
saying today that if women had had 
a voice in the counsels of the great 
nations which are at war, if the 
mother’s point of view had helped. to 
shape the diplomacy of these coun- 
tries, perhaps this terrible calamity 
might have been averted. 
“Another very common objection 
is that women in this country ought 
not to vote because some women in 
England have become militant in’ 
their demand for the ballot. A few 
weeks ago, it sometimes seemed 
worth while to say quite a little about 
militancy, but today when all the 
damage wrought by the women in 
their ten years of warfare, the lives 
