16 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
The Manchester Trust Company 
Capital $100,000 
Surplus $25,000 
Officers 
Oliver T. Roberts, President. 
Roger W. Babson, Vice-President. 
William Hoare, Vice-President. 
Harry W. Purington, Secretary and Treasurer. 
Directors 
Roger W. Babson, 
Dr. G. W. Blaisdell, 
Michael J. Callahan, 
Ernest S. Curtis, 
Everett L. Edmands, 
Charles E. Fisher, 
Henry S. Grew, 
Maynard B,. Gilman, 
William Hoare, 
George L. Knight, 
Edward A. Lane, 
F. J. Merrill, 
Oliver T. Roberts, 
Horace Standley, 
George F. Willett. 
Manchester Trust Company 
MANGHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
RAYMOND C. ALLEN 
Assoc. Mem. Am. Soc. C. E. 
Member Boston ovc. C. E. 
CIVIL ENGINEER 
Investigations and Reports—Design and Superintendence of Con- 
struction—Design of Roads and Avenues—Surveys and Estimates. 
Established 1897 
LEE’S BLOCK, MANCHESTER 
TEL. 73-2 and 3 
MANCHESTER 
It must have been a pleasing sur- 
prise to Timothy Sullivan and his 
daughter, Miss Mollie Sullivan, for- 
mer residents of Tappan street, Man- 
chester, when they attended a moving 
picture show in Seattle, Wash., one 
night last week, to see a picture cast 
on the screen showing Baker’s Is- 
land with its light houses, and again 
in a few minutes to see the Manches- 
ter and Beverly Farms shore with its 
background of wooded hills dotted 
EVERY MONTH IS 
with houses here and there. In a let- 
ter to a friend in Manchester Miss 
Sullivan tells of the pleasure afforded 
them. She had read previously in 
the Breeze of the motion picture com- 
pany that encamped on Mystery 
Isle late last fall and it all came to her 
in a moment. Miss Sullivan expects 
to come east next June to spend the 
summer in Manchester. 
Tonight in the Town hall the Febru- 
ary party of the Winter Series will be 
held. It will be a costume party and 
will be in many -respects the prettiest 
of the series. 
ONE OF WEDDINGS 
And if you are Desirous of Obtaining Wedding Gifts for your Friends you 
will find just the Pleasing and Constant Reminder that you Wish in Our 
Stock. 
STERLING SILVER TABLE WARE IS PARTICULARLY APPROPRIATE 
We have a Large Stock of Silver Flat Ware 
W.F.Chisholm & Son 
ESTABLISHED 1874 
Jewelers, 161 Main street 
Gloucester, Mass. 
MANCHESTER 
Miss Eleanor Donahue of Chestnut 
Hill is the week-end guest of Mr. 
and Mrs. F. B. Rust. 
The following note written by ex- 
Chief of Police Urquhart of this town 
was noted in the N. E. Telephone 
Topics: “Friend operators—Will 
you accept this little gift as a token 
of my appreciation for the assitance 
you each have rendered to me in the 
discharge of my arduous duties, and 
I wish to thank you one and all for 
the prompt and courteous manner in 
which my calls have been responded 
to at all hours of the night and day. 
Your help has added greatly to the ef- 
ficiency of my department.” Mr. 
Urquhart sent the operators a large 
box of confectionery. He is_ still 
Chief of the Arlington police force. 
Jog MitcHEeLL CHaAppLE’s TaLK ON 
PROMINENT MEN Hicuiy _ In‘TER- 
ESTING 
Joe Mitchell Chapple, editor of the 
National Magazine, was in Manchester 
last Friday evening and entertained at 
the Town hall in the third of the series 
of entertainments in the Manchester 
club course. His “Flashlights of 
Prominent Men” were indeed flash- 
lights such as nobody but 
thoroughly acquainted with the per- 
sons alluded to could portray. 
Chapple spoke of his acquaintance 
with several of the leading men of the 
last generation, by way of introduct- 
ion, and then gave his audience an op- 
portunity to call for names. Quick 
as the name was spoken Mr. Chapple 
would flash off a picture and character 
study of the man, touching on those 
little intimacies such as only one with 
personal knowledge could do. His 
knowledge of such men is truly won- 
derful and comes through his years of 
newspaper and magazine work in 
Washington and all over the country. 
Mr. Chapple came to Manchester di- 
rect from a 2700-mile journey across 
the country. He had talked two 
nights previous in Chicago. Though 
he complained of being tired he never- 
theless was overflowing with his sub- 
ject and rightly his method of enter- 
tainment is called “flashlights.” His 
talk was greatly enjoyed. It lasted 
two hours, at the conclusion of which 
everybody was so anxious to meet Mr. 
Chapple he missed the last train to- 
Boston and had to remain in town 
over night, a guest of Editor Marshall 
of the Cricket. 
When you meet a sad looking man_ 
— 
Onem 
Mr. — 
it’s easy to acquire full details of his~ 
troubles. 
