20 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MANCHESTER TOWN MEETING 
(Continued from Page 13) 
A low wooden building would suit 
him. 
Mr. Reed: ‘‘Building must be fire- 
proof according to law.”’ 
The motion to appropriate $1000 
was lost. 
F. P. Knight said this was getting 
to be a serious question. Let us 
have a committee of three summer 
residents and three local people act 
with the parks board and get some- 
thing tangible to work on. He made 
a motion to that effect. 
The moderator appointed: C. W. 
Taintor, Gardiner M. Lane, William 
Hooper, C. T. Roberts, F. P. Knight 
and W. C. Rust. 
' Art. 57. Sewerage. F. K. Swett, 
chairman of the committee, sub- 
mitted a brief report and offered the 
following motion: 
That the subject matter of Article 
57 in the annual warrant and relat- 
ing to a sewerage system for the 
town, be referred to a committee of 
9, they to consider the project from 
a financial stand-point together with 
an approximate cost of land and 
other damages, the approximate cost 
of maintenance, and to submit to the 
town a system of sewer assessments | 
that will show in a concise manner 
the individual cost and the approxi- 
mate amount of revenue the town 
would derive therefrom. This com- 
mittee to report at a special town 
meeting called for the purpose and 
that the sum of $500 be appropri- 
ated for their uses. 
Under Art. 58, the action of the 
committee on sewerage in their pe- 
tition to the general court for per- 
mission to install sewerage was rat- 
ified. 
Art. 52, $1525 was appropriated 
for the purpose of paying the debts 
known as the A. W. Smith and the 
B. L. Allen funds. 
Art. 53, salaries of town officers— 
same as last year. 
Art. 30. $600 was appropriated 
for use of tree warden’s depart- 
ment. 
Art. 54. It was voted that $20,000 
be required as the bond of the town 
treasurer and tax collector. 
Art. 56. Referred to selectmen. 
(Matter of selling strip of land on 
Highland avenue to F. P. Frazier). 
Art. 60. $65.50 refunded to Relief 
Fund of Allen Post, the amount of 
rent paid by the W RC. 
Art. 55. ‘“‘Shall the town vote to 
accept Chapter 468 of the acts of 
general court of 1911, being an act 
to extend the provisions of the Civil 
Service to chiefs of police.”’ A Yes 
and No ballot vote was taken on this 
and the attitude of the voters was 
plainly shown by the overwhelming 
vote against the proposition. The 
vote was 24 yes, 155 no. 
Under Article 61, $4111.38 was ap- 
propriated to cover deficiencies as 
they appear in the printed report. 
Under articles 62 and 63 it was 
voted that all taxes be paid by No- 
vember lst, and that interest at 6 
percent per annum be paid after 
that date. 
Art. 63. The treasurer was given 
the authority to borrow in antici- 
pation of taxes an amount not ex- 
ceeding $80,000. 
It was voted that $100 be reappro- 
priated for the use of park board to 
pay for plans already obtained. 
At 9.40 the meeting adjourned 
until April 15, at 7.380 o’clock. 
MANCHESTER CHURCHES 
BAPTIST CHURCH—Rev. A. G. 
Warner, pastor. Public worship, 
10.45 a.m. Bible school, 12.15, ves- 
try. Men’s class, 12.15, auditorium. 
Young People’s union, 6.00. Eve- 
ning service, 7.00. Prayer meetings 
Friday evening at 7.30. Communion 
first Sunday in the month. All 
seats are free at every service. 
ORTHODOX CONGREGATIONAL 
—Rev. L. H. Ruge, pastor. Sunday 
morning worship, with sermon, 
10.45. Bible school 12.00. Evening 
worship with sermon, 7.00. Prayer 
meeting Tuesday, 7.30, in the chapel 
Woman’s Missionary society the Ist 
Thursday of each month. Sittings 
can be obtained of A. S. Jewett. 
SACRED HEART CHURCH—Rev. 
Mark Sullivan, pastor. Masses, 
7.00, 8.30 and 10.30 o’clock. Sun- 
day school at 2.30 o’clock. Rosary, 
Instruction and Benediction of the 
Blessed Sacrament, 3.30 o’clock. 
Week Days.—Morning mass at 7.30 
o’clock. Advanced class Friday 
evening at 7.30 o’clock. 
Rev. A. G. Warner will preach at 
the Baptist church, Sunday morn- 
ing on ‘‘Reconciliation.’’ His eve- 
ning subject will be ‘‘The Unavoid- 
able Christ.’’ 
A delegation went to Gloucester 
last evening from the Baptist church 
to the First Baptist church, to at- 
tend a conference on Sunday school 
work. 
Rev. L. H. Ruge will preach 
at the Congregational church Sun- 
day morning on ‘‘The True Children 
of God’’; in the evening on ‘‘ Jesus 
as a Wedding Guest at Cana.’’ 
Read the Breeze. 
ESSEX 
Wednesday morning the sad news 
was received by telephone that Mrs. 
Rose Corporan had not survived the 
shock of the operation she had just 
passed through but had passed away 
during Tuesday night. 
The Selectmen and Treasurer ap- 
peared before Charles F. Gettemy, 
secretary of the Bureau of Statistics 
on Wednesday and made arrange- 
ment whereby they could carry out 
the proposed refunding of the old 
town debt of $17,128.71. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Any person wishing to become 
naturalized may obtain information 
and copies of the law from Wm. 
Standley, 423 Essex street, and Geo. 
Il. Bennett, 18 Hart street, who are 
the naturalization committee of the 
Ward 6 Republican committee. 
Henry D. Stillman is visiting rel- 
atives at Dexter, Me. 
Pat’k Crowley and family moved 
into the cottage in Connolly plaee, 
formerly occupied by the James F. 
MecGerity family, this week. 
The branch library is doing good 
work and has been well patronized 
all winter. It has a collection of 
about 3800 books and books are re- 
ceived daily from the Beverly cen- 
tral library. The quarters are en- 
tirely too small, however. Another 
need is a published catalogue of the 
books, so that a user can make a 
selection therefrom. 
The Beverly Farms Brass band is 
planning to give an entertainment 
and dance at the end of the lenten 
season. The entertaining program 
will be made up of selections by 
the band, vocal and musical selec-_ 
tions from good entertainers, read- 
ings and vaudeville sketches. 
Theodore Larcom, while at work 
with his wood sawing machine yes- 
‘orday, caught the second finger of 
the left hand in a cog wheel sever- 
ing it at the end joint. 
Forester H. Pierce, Jr. is substi- 
tuting as night operator at the local 
exchange. The regular operator, 
Harold Langdon, is in the hospital 
with water on the knee. 
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Warren of 
Rockland, Me. are among this 
week’s visitors to Beverly Farms. 
Mrs. Smith (who is reading the morn- 
ing paper): ‘‘A prominent coal dealer 
was paralyzed in his office last week.’’ 
Mr. Smith: ‘‘ Paralyzed was he? 
Probably the driver forgot to weigh 
himself before he drove off with 1,600 
pounds of coal.’’ . 
