NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
THE MANCHESTER TRUST COMPANY 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, MASS. 
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RAYMOMD C. ALLEN 
Assoc. Mem. Am. Soc. C. E. 
Member Boston Soc. C. E. |» 
CIVIL ENGINEER 
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MANCHESTER’ 
The annual outing of the Manches- 
ter Brotherhood will be held at Tuck’s 
Point tomorrow. 
The chiefs will be raised-up at ‘the 
next meeting of Conomo tribe of 
Red Men, Wednesday evening, Juty 
21, by deputy A:;W. Ellison and suite 
of Winnepurket Tribe, Lynn. 
A Neat Line of Men’s and Boys’ 
Spring Caps at W. R. Bell’s. adv. 
A special meeting of the North 
Shore Horticultural society is called 
for this evening in their hall at 7.30 
o’clock. A large attendance of the 
members is urged as a matter of vital 
importance to the society is to be con- 
sidered. 
Men’s and Ladies’ rubber sole boots 
and oxfords at W. R. Bell’s. adv. 
Several Manchester members of the 
Gardeners’ and Florists’ club of Bos- 
ton went to Newport, R. I., on the an- 
nual outing of the club yesterday, 
leaving Boston by special car on an 
early morning train. Mr. and Mrs. 
Eric Wetterlow, Mr. Warner of the 
Walker estate, and L. W. Carter and 
William Duff, the latter head gardener 
at the Frazier estate are in the party. 
The Newport flower show is_ being 
held this week. 
EQUAL SUFFRAGE NEWS. 
The chief suffrage news of the 
week is as follows :— 
Saturday of this week, the 17th, will 
be “Bluebird Day” throughout the 
state. 
The date for the visit of the Cam- 
paign Canvassers to Manchester has 
been fixed for August 24. This will 
be a Suffrage day and evening for 
Manchester, and full details will be 
given later. | 
Meanwhile arrangements are being 
made for Mrs. Claude Gilson, the new 
vice president of the Massachusetts 
Federation of Woman’s Clubs, to visit 
Manchester and give a talk on the re- 
cent convention at Marion and_ the 
general situation. This talk will take 
place probably about the 25th or 26th 
of this month. 
Several more granges in Massachu- 
setts have endorsed equal suffrage. 
—L. R. 5S. 
Editor North Shore Breeze :— 
As you are so fair in publishing 
opinions on both sides of the suffrage- 
for-woman question, will you permit 
me to say a few words? “I see by 
the papers” that the Anti-Suffragists 
have held a convention recently at 
July 16, 1915. 
Miss Margaret M. McNamara 
Manicuring, Scalp Massage 
Marcel Waving 
Lincoln St., Manchester 
Telephone 
Springfield, this state, and among the 
speakers was a man hired from an- 
other state, who told the people there 
assembled that women were unrelia- 
ble, untruthful and unfaithful in their 
duties to home and family! The 
women applauded the speaker as, if 
they gloried in their shame. I am an 
old-fashioned person, but I read in the 
Good Book about the good woman 
whose “price is above rubies”; also re- 
garding the bad woman “whose steps 
lead down to nell and whose feet tale 
hold on death.” Now, as wheat and 
tares together grow (same authority), 
1 suppose the same state exists today 
as in the days of old. To which class 
dothe Suffragists and also the Antis 
belong? The greater the cause the 
greater the persecution. This man re- 
ferred to above borrowed from an- 
other state, by his persecutions of 
statement will aid the cause he op- 
poses. The appalling conditions in the 
world today have been brought about 
by men. No woman had a hand in 
it; but, given a chance, she will, by 
the help of Almighty God, help to 
right the wrong; anyway, she cannot 
do worse than man. 
It has been-said that if women vote 
they should shoulder arms and go to 
war. No woman ever raised or ever 
will raise up sons to fight—that belong 
to beasts, and when women are given 
their rights and placed side by side 
with man on an equality with him, 
where God placed her in the first 1a; 
stance, war will cease. Look at the 
long line of wonderful women! Flor- 
ence Nightingale, the “Lady of the 
Lamp,” whose shadow in passing the 
poor soldiers on their hospital cots 
was blessed by them, is a good exam- 
ple of scores and hundreds we ail 
could name. Even these noble work- 
ers would have done more and better 
work if they had had political .free- 
dom. Life is fuller and richer be- 
cause of contact with the world. I 
am sure that married women would 
be happier for an outside knowledge 
of business, because they would be 
better companions for their men folks. 
Being more intelligent on a greater va- 
riety of subjects, they would also be 
better managers of their special busi- 
ness of home and family, for the home 
is vitally concerned with matters of 
governmental efficiency. 
In our own state a woman may not 
marry without a license from the goy- 
ernment; she cannot build her house 
except as the law decrees; her supplies 
