48 NORTH SHORE ARE Ey Ehud Roa 
July 301915. 
YACHTING, GOLF, TENNIS 
AND OTHER SPORTS 
Along the NORTH SHORE 
a ae 
Essex County CrLus Gor 
A field of twenty-three players 
took part in the weekly golf tourna- 
ment at the Essex County club last 
Saturday. It was a handicap bogey 
and the Colonel appeared to be on his 
metal that day for he succeeded in 
douring everybody. The score: 
F. T. Pfaelzer (12) 1 down, T. J. Cool- 
idge, 3rd.. (12) 2 down, H. D. Chapin 
(11) 3 down, E. E. Williams (12) 4 down, 
G. G. Snowden (12) 5 down, A. F. South- 
erland (8) 5 down, D. H. Hostetter (15) 6 
down, H:H, - Stevens 7(9).°7 % down, <P: 
Moore (2) 7 down, 8. Carr (11) 9 down, 
No eards:. HP) eMokKeans Ji. Bee Or 
Munn, J. H. Lancashire, G. C. Miller, E. 
B. Chandler, A. S. Porter, Jr., R. Board- 
man, E. K. Arnold, C. M. Amory, F. T. 
Pfaelzer, Jr., R. T. Lincoln, H. N. Spauld- 
ing and A. G. Milbank. 
In the Tedesco C. C. golf at Swamp- 
5 
scott last Saturday, FE. W. Brown and 
J. S. Whiting furnished close competi- 
tion in the sweepstakes. Brown came 
out on top with a net total of 72. 
IT hesscores’s 
Gross Hdep. Net 
2 
ison Wigee ta O Uva meee Seen Pees 99 PAS 72 
ose ItLN eS Peteuene ake tae 96 a 73 
Nigkadn valli. yes tin 84 9 £5 
Hee aid d Been ern a 99 24 TD 
Meee Borardusmenwne. 96 20 76 
A. M. Bradshaw ....... 96 19 eh 
SG bl Odo esau a ctermcete 104 27 (ie 
5c 5 ROMERO IES 101 24 77 
5 SS CAS - 90 11 79 
Se rher pee ste 108 27 $1 
99 15 84 
J. Leach 
A, M. Blake 
H. B. Brown 
Be Ges Wi OCs ete cee Le 
Ouimet, who has been seen on the 
North Shore many times this season 
at the various golf clubs nosed his way 
into his third state championship Sat- 
urday at Woodland. In the 36-hole 
final against Willian C. Chick, Ouimet 
won by 6 and 5. 
John Black, Jr.’s sloop Flirt led the 
Boston Y. C. fleet into Rockland, Me., 
last week after sailing a great race of 
35 miles from Portland to the Rock- 
land breakwater. She finished 9m 
30s ahead of the Tunipoo II., which 
won an earlier race. John J. Mar- 
tin’s Wasaka won in Class B, finishing 
57 16s ahead of A. W.. Stevens’ 
Manatagua. ‘The Wasaka made the 
fastest time of any yacht in the fleet. 
Coming golf events at Tedesco C. 
C., Swampscott: Aug. 21, special 
event (open for suggestions); Aug. 
28, 18 holes, medal play, best selected 
nine holes three-quarter handicap; 
SPRAYING, 
and INSECT WORK 
BURLAPPING, 
CEMENTING, BOLTING 
exe Box 244. 
Sept. 4-6, club championship, 72 holes 
(open only to regular members). 
MINIATURE ALMANAC 
Week beginning Friday, July 30. 
Sun Light High Tide 
Day Rises Sets Auto A. M. P. M, 
Pires 3 Oe Sate ogee 7.38 1:32 2,2 
NSE A rat tot aac ia P74 7.37 2.20. 2.49 
Sunpe sees anne eo 7.35 3.8 3.54 
Mon 2 4.36 7.4: 7.34 3.58 4.23 
LCS Monet die iene .o 1.30 ©4.D0 on. O50 
Wed 4 438 7.2 7.32 5.44 6.6 
Thi Di t4o Oe eal 7.381 640 6.59 
MRS. PUTNAM’S LETTER 
Editor North Shore Breeze: 
It would be interesting to know 
why the state organizer for Woman’s 
Suffrage was brought down here on 
Tuesday to talk about the Federated 
Clubs and their meeting at Marion, 
for very little interest was shown in 
the matter. Only 23 people were 
present (including the speaker and 
the presiding officer) and several of 
them were not Manchester people. 
Mrs. Gilson was elected first Vice- 
president of the Federation of Wo- 
men’s Clubs this year at Marion. The 
election of officers took place the day 
before the important question of suf- 
frage was introduced instead’ of on 
the last day as is customary in meet- 
ings of such organizations. It would 
‘have been interesting to ask Mrs. 
Gilson why precedent was disregard- 
ed in this matter, but it was useless 
to ask questions of Mrs. Gilson last 
Tuesday in spite of the request for 
questions made by the presiding of- 
ficer, for Mrs. Gilson was not an- 
swering them. In her speech Mrs. 
Gilson made the statement (non-con- 
troversially, she wished it under- 
stood) that the suffrage resolution 
was passed at Marion because the ma- 
jority wanted it—but when asked 
why the notice of the resolution was 
only sent to the clubs after most of 
them had adjourned for the summer, 
so that no real test of the opinion of 
the clubs could be had at Marion, she 
said the question was controversial 
and refused to answer. What little 
the humiliating position in which her 
refusal placed uer answered nothing. 
Is it controversial to ask the reason 
of an action by the Governing Board 
and non-controversial to state the 
views of the members of the Federa- 
THE CIGARETTE 
You have been looking for--- A wonder- 
ful b'end---A change from Turkish. 
ASK YOUR DEALEW 
tion? When anyone crawls out of 
such a hole as this one can hardly 
doubt the reason. 
The second question—why the suf- 
fragists killed the Drury Bill, which 
would have given to the women of 
the state the chance to say whether 
they wanted to vote or not, was no 
more sapiently answered—she , said 
the suffragists could not kill any bilt 
because they had no vote. Now bills 
are not killed by the votes of voters 
because there is no way in which a 
man can vote on a bill which is. be- 
fore the Legislature. One would 
have supposed that Mrs. Gilson 
would have known this—perhaps she 
did—who knows? 
The exhibition of inability to prove 
her statements reminded me of a con- 
versation between Mrs. Maud Wood 
Parke and another lady which was 
overheard on the hotel piazza in 
Marion one evening. A lady had 
stated that one of the dangers of 
wonan’s suffrage lay in the fact that 
many immigrant men came here to 
work and did not send for their 
wives until they had established them- 
selves and became naturalized Amer- 
ican citizens, with the result that if 
women had the suffrage these women 
would land on our shores full-fledged 
citizens with the power to cast a bal- 
lot, and yet not only with no knowl- 
edge of the laws of the land in which 
they were to vote, but often unable 
to speak one word of the language. 
To this Mrs. Parke said, “I believe in 
R. E. HENDERSON 
BEVERLY, MASS. 
Telephone. 
