April Entertainment for District 
Nurse Fund. 
The April entertainment for the 
benefit of the District Nurse fund, 
will be given in the Congregational 
chapel on Monday evening, April 22, 
at 7.45 o'clock. An interesting pro- 
gram consisting of readings, singing 
by the High School Glee club, vocal 
solos, and piano and violin solos by 
out-of-town talent has been ar- 
ranged. 
The pianist is Miss Helen Sullivan 
of Salem, a young artist of excep- 
tional ability and promise. She has 
recently played very successfully be- 
fore the Salem society for the Higher 
Edueation of Women with Mr. 
Jaeques Hoffmann of the Hoffmann 
quartet and the Boston Symphony 
orchestra. Miss Sullivan will play 
the following program: 
Prelude Mendelssohn 
Butterfly 
Wedding Day at Troldhaugen Grieg 
Sundown Helen Hopekirk 
Liebestraum Liszt 
Valeik John Mokrejs 
Tee eream and eake will be on 
sale. Admission 15 cents. 
} 
““Wanted—A reliable man’’ read 
Mrs. Bascom from the advertising 
columns of the paper. Then she 
raised her glasses upon her forehead, 
looked severely at her husband, and 
remarked: ‘‘And the world’ll wait a 
considerable number of centuries yet 
before it gets him.’’ 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
93 
You’d scarce expect one of my 
age, in merchandising to engage and 
hope to get a paying trade without 
the local paper’s aid. And yet I 
did that very thing; I opened up a 
store last spring—this month the 
sheriff took my stock and sold it at 
the auction block. Don’t view me 
with a scornful eye, but simply say 
as I pass by, ‘“‘there goes a fool who 
seemed to think he had no use for 
printers’ ink.’’ There is a truth as 
broad as earth and _ business men 
should know its worth; ‘tis simply 
this, the public buys its goods from 
those who advertise. 
‘“What is a home without a pa- 
per?’’? A home without a newspaper 
is no home at all. It is a kind of 
dreary den—a rendezvous of bed- 
bues and fleas, where the inhabitants 
live in blissful ignorance of what the 
world is doing. It is inhabited by a 
class who do not know who is presi- 
dent or what he is president of— 
who never find out that a thing has 
happened until long after everyone 
else has forgotten it. The children 
erow up in rags and dirt, while the 
wife generally finds consolation in 
darning socks and lugging a pipe 
loaded with long, green tobacco, and 
the man generally lives because he 
ean’t die and he is too lazy to kill 
himself. He goes out on election 
days, and does not know who he is 
voting for, but just takes the ticket 
bearing the name _ his great-great. 
grandfather voted for. 
SAN FRANCISCO 1919 
Announcement made of free trip to the 
Panama-Pacific 
International 
Exposition 
ORD has been received from Sunset, the Magazine of the 
Pacific and the Far West, of the organization of the Sunset 
Panama-Pacific Club. The Club offers a four weeks’ trip to the Ex- 
position to be held in San Francisco in 1915, including railway fare, 
Pullman, diner, hotel accommodations, admissions to the fair, side 
trips to points of interest, all in return for a little time each week to 
be devoted to the work of the Magazine. 
The exposition is to be held to commemorate the completion of 
the Panama Canal, connecting the Pacific and Atlantic. 
From all 
indications it will be by far the greatest World’s Fair ever held. 
The Magazine has issued a very attractive booklet descriptive of 
the trip, and giving further particulars, which will be sent on appli- 
cation. 
The membership is very limited and it is not likely that more 
than one or two applications will be accepted from this vicinity. 
Request for particulars should be sent to 
SUNSET PANAMA-PACIFIC CLUB 
317 BATTERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 
nna 
The Best 
of the Dinner 
comes last when you serve 
the guest with Jersey Ice 
Cream. Don’t mar an other- 
wise perfect repast by an 
inferior grade of ice cream 
that is lumpy, salty and filled 
with bits of ice. Smoothness, 
richness and full flavor are 
found in every plate of 
Jersey 
Ice Cream 
Tested cream from our own Ver- 
mont creameries, pure fruit flavors 
and extracts and the best cane 
sugar are the ingredients used in 
the making and the result is a 
guaranteed pure ice cream. 
Wherever the Jersey sign is 
shown in drug stores, confection- 
ers or ice cream parlors you 
know you willbe served with the 
best ice cream sold in New 
England. Try it today. 
Sold by the plate or package 
JERSEY ICE CROAM CO., Lawrence, Mass. 
FOR SALE BY 
ALFRED WALEN 
Druggist - - Manchester 
and agents in Beverly, 
Gloucester and Rockport 
Wilt thou “take her ‘for thy 
‘‘nard,’’ for better or for worse; to 
to have, to hold, to fondly guard, 
till hauled off in the hearse? Wilt 
thou let her have her way, consult 
her many wishes, make the fires up 
every day, and help her with the 
dishes? Wilt thou give her all the 
‘‘stuff’’ her little purse will pack, 
buy her a monkey boa and muff, a 
little seal skin saeque? Wilt thou 
comfort and support her father, 
mother, Aunt Jemima, Uncle John, 
thirteen sisters and a brother? And 
his grew pale and blank, it was too 
late to jilt; as through the chapel 
floor he sank he sadly said ‘‘T wilt,’’ 
