NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
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| CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 
Advertisements under this head at 2c per word the first week. One 
cent per word after the first week. Stamps may be used in payment 
TENEMENT TO LET, 11 rooms, with 
bath and two toilets, electric lights, furnace 
heat, suitable for lodging house; centrally 
located. -Also office in same building. Will 
let together or separate. Apply to E. S. Brad- 
ley, 42 Central St., Manchester. 2t 
GRADUATE MALE NURSE of wide ex- 
perience would like night work. No conta- 
gious cases. Best of references. Registry for 
nurses. Delaney’s drug store, 207 Cabot St., 
Beverly. Phone 510. 13tf 
The old spirit of enmity and hos- 
tility which was necessary and profit-, 
able in the primitive days is out of 
place in twentieth century civilization ; 
it is destructive without being in any 
way constructive. We are living in 
a combination of two strange periods, 
the mediaeval and the modern and we 
must make a choice between militar- 
ism and progress. In proof of this, 
Mrs. Duryea spoke a little about the 
history of civilization and she said in 
part, “If in the old days when man 
was first gaining a footing upon this 
wild old world of ours, after emerging 
from the lower kingdoms, he had not 
been a fighting animal, we should not 
be here now. I am a pacifist and a 
woman and I want to say, particularly 
as I see some gentlemen in the audi- 
ence, that I do not believe that the 
fighting spirit in man is an indication 
of original sin, but that it is out of 
place today. Early in history, the 
clan spirit was developed and all 
through the history of man runs the 
golden thread of growing friendship 
and co-operation. 
primitive methods in the twentieth 
century with any profit; old-time war 
methods don’t gain what they used 
to for the countries engaged.” 
The speaker told a little of the in- 
teresting Hague conferences of the 
second of which has been said that 
there was “all the world together in 
one room.” It was here that the 
Hague Court, an international tri- 
bunal where countries should bring 
their differences, as individuals to an 
ordinary court, and should abide by 
the decision of said court, was first 
discussed. In 1902 the practicibility 
of this “Utopian dream” was demon- 
strated by Theodore Roosevelt, then 
President of the United States, who 
called the Hague court to settle the 
difficulty between America and Mex- 
ico. Times are constantly changing 
and many of the old-time things such 
as piracy, duelling and religious per- 
secution, once considered highly re- 
spectable occupations, are done away 
We cannot use’ 
DENTIST 
J. Russell MacKinnon, D. M.D. 
10 Church St. MANCHESTER 
Office Hours: 
9-12 and 1-4 except Sundays. Telephone 85 
J. P. LATIONS 
CARRIAGE BUILDER 
Storage for Carriages Carriage Painting 
First-Class Work 
Shop— Depot Square - Manchester, Mass. 
NOTICE 
% 4 
The fiscal year of the Town of 
Manchester closes December 31, 1914. 
All bills against the town must be 
presented for approval before 8. P. 
M. on Monday, December 28th, 1914. 
WALTER R. BELL, 
GrorcE R. DEAN, 
FRANK G. CHEEVER, 
Selectmen of Manchestre. 
Manchester, Dec. 15, 1914. 
PUBLIC HEARING 
On petition of the New England 
Telephone and Telegraph Company a 
hearing will be held at the office of 
the Board of Selectmen, on Tuesday 
evening, Dec. 29, 1914, at 8 o’clock, 
for the location of two poles on the 
following street: 
Lincoln Avenue, so-called, 
east of School Street. 
WALTER R. BELL, 
Grorck R. DEAN, 
FRANK G. CHEEVER, 
Selectmen of Manchester. 
Manchester, Dec. 15, 1914. 
war will surely join that list in the 
near future. The time has come to 
substitute friendship and co-ordina- 
tion for hostility and the great Europ- 
ean trouble in the end will doubtless be 
settled by an international conference 
at a great capital, Washington per- 
haps, when the United States will take 
the lead in the settlement. The eyes 
of the world are at present fixed on 
the quiet man at the White House, 
who has changed the slogan, ‘““Watch- 
with, and considered barbarous and | ful Waiting,” from a term of oppro- 
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CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS 
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Why not give her a Watch, 
a Ring, Pendant, Chain, Brace- 
let, Rosary, Locket, etc. 
Why not give him a Watch, 
a Ring, Fob, Scarf Pin in clasp, 
Chain, etc. 
We have one of the prettiest 
and best lines of goods we ever 
carried. 
A nice line of Diamond Rings 
$10 to $200. 
STARR C. HEWITT 
7 158 Essex Street, Salem, Mass, 
MRS. MARGARET LEE 
has opened for the season her 
HAND LAUNDRY 
72 Pleasant St,, Manchester 
Tel. 326 W 
First Class Work Guaranteed 
MG .WWW  F°»Fu™rémrnwws1,, KI 
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Miss Margaret M. McNamara 
Manicuring, Scalp Massaege 
Marcel Waving 
24 Norwood Avenue, Manchester 
s Telephone 164 
N. GREENBERG 
CUSTOM SHOE REPAIRING 
Repairing done while you wait 
Guaranteed to be Satisfactory 
Kimball Building Union Street 
opp. Postoffice 
Manchester - - Mass. 
CARD OF THANKS 
The undersigned desire to extend 
their sincere thanks for the expres- 
sion of sympathy and various kind- 
nesses in the loss of their infant son. 
Mr. AND Mrs. Martin EyYBERSE. 
Manchester, Dec. 17, 1914. 
brium to one of dignified honor. The 
results of the conference must event- 
ually be the establishment of the rule 
that a nation, as well as a man, will 
find it cheaper and more honorable to 
buy:than to steal, of the government 
(Continued on page i4z): 2> x 
