12 
NORTH 
SHORE BREEZE 
Jan. 19, 1917. 
EVER PAY A BILL TWICE? 
DONT DO IT. 
Pay all bills by check and get an excellent receipt. 
A check book and a Bank balance are evidence 
that you are business-like. 
THE MANCHESTER TRUST COMPANY 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, MASS. 
Banking hours 8:30-2:30; Sats. 8:30-1; Sat. Ev’gs. 7-8 (deposits only) 
RAYMOND C. ALLEN 
Assoc. Mem. Am. Soc. C. E. 
CIVIL ENGINEER 
Investigations and Reports—Des‘g1 and Superintendence of Con- 
struction—Design of Roads and Avenues—Surveys and Estimates. 
ESTABLISHED 1397 
cele 2 0 teketaa F 6lf075-k and AV. 
Lee’s Block, Manchester :: 
MANCHESTER 
The ambulance was called Monday 
morning to take Mrs. Clement Har- 
ris (Minnie Lethbridge) of Putnam 
court, to the Beverly hospital for an 
operation for acute appendicitis. 
George Merrill of ‘Middleton is 
substituting at the B. & M. depot dur- 
ing the illness of Station Agent Rand. 
George A. Norris is acting agent dur- 
ing Mr. Rand’s absence and Mr. Mer- 
rill is taking his place as assistant. 
Manchester 
Member Boston Soc. C. E. 
News from St. Augustine, Florida, 
announces the birth of a son last 
Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. 
Baker of this town. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
James Reed and family have moved 
to the Marshall tenement on School 
st., recently vacated by Senter Stan- 
ley and family. R. C. Allen is re- 
modeling the Gilson house on the 
corner of School and North streets, 
where Mr. Reed has lived a number 
of years. 
Flectric Co. 
ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER 
ELECTRIC FANS HELP PO KEEP RY OU GWA 
LACE an electric fan so that it will blow through the 
radiator and the transmission of heat from radiator 
to air will be increased several times over that existing 
when gravity alone is depended upon. 
Cay catet elie 
electric fan will increase the comfort of any room by 
circulating the warm air which rises to the ceiling. 
The Fan is a Year Around Comfort. 
Office: 
21 SUMMER STREET 
Telephone 168W 
T. A. LEES, Manager 
CONDITIONS FOR PEACE 
W. T. CoLyvyER OUTLINES To BROTHER- 
HOOD BAsiIs OF SETTLEMENT 
AFTER EUROPEAN War. 
“We will never get a lasting peace 
based on the spirit of revenge,” said 
W. T. Colyer, the English socialist 
who addressed the Manchester Broth- 
erhood at the Baptist church on 
Monday evening. “Lasting peace 
never follows a victory of arms. It 
must be grounded on an international 
square deal. No country wants pun- 
ishment and revenge all around. Eng- 
land wants Germany punished for the 
crime of Belgium; but does she want 
tie division of Persia into spheres of 
‘fluence punished? Does she want 
the crime against China in forcing 
the opium trade upon her punished? 
Do the Allies want Russia’s crimes 
against inland punished? Few 
think that things of that sort ought 
to be punished. 
“To get lasting peace we must 
strike at the system of diplomatic in- 
tercourse which has been in existence 
in Kurope. We must fight the idea 
that force is back of all 
greatness. We must kill the bad idea, 
not the one who represents it. Eng- 
land herself has forgotten her prin- 
ciple as a nation for the principle of 
force. You cannot assail German 
militarism as the cause of the war 
just because the Germans got full 
value for the money they spent on 
armament. Russia and England 
each spent more on armament than 
Germany before the war, with France 
a slight way behind. And it is the 
amount of money you are willing to 
put into anything that determines 
your belief in it. Whether you get 
as much out of it for the money 
spent as the other fellow does, de-. 
pends upon the amount of your brains 
and efficiency. Every action has a 
reaction, sow the wind and you will 
reap the whirlwind. Europe is reap- 
ing the fruit of its past deeds 
“Back in 1871 you will find a cause 
for the present war. The annexation 
of Alsace and Lorraine was a viola- 
tion of the principle that a people 
have the right to decide for them- 
selves what their political boundaries 
shall be. It left a canker of continu- 
ing sense of injustice which was one 
of the causes of the present war. 
“Neglect of the Macedonian ques- 
tion at the close of the Russo-Turk- 
ish war led to the first Balkan war. 
There is always friction and trouble 
when politicial divisions separate one 
people. If the Allies are not equally 
solicitious of the rights of the Poles 
under Russian rule as they are of 
those under Prussian rule there will 
national © 
