MANOHESTER 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, 6.30. Eve- 
ning service, 7.30. Prayer meetings 
Friday evening at 7.45. 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, 7.30 Prayer 
meeting Tuesday, 7.45, in the chopel. 
Woman’s Missionary society the 1st 
Thursday of cach month. Sittings 
can be obtained of A. S. Jewett. 
FIRST UNITARIAN, Masconomo 
st. Service Sundays at 11 a. m. 
Seats free. Everyone welcome. 
SACRED HEART— Rev. Mark 
Sullivan, pastor. Masses, 8.00, and 
10.30 o’clock. Sunday school at 
2.30 o’clock. Rosary, Instruction 
and Benediction of the Blessed Sac- 
rament, 3.30 o’clock. Week Days. 
—Morning mass at 7.30 o’clock. Ad- 
vanced class Friday evening at 7.30 
o’clock. 
Rey. A. G. Warner will preach at 
the Baptist church Sunday morning 
“<The Multiplied Man’’ and in the 
evening on ‘‘Character Building.’’ 
The Beverly Farms Baptist church. 
Three services each Sunday. Morn- 
ing Worship at 10.45, with sermon 
by the minister, Rev. Clarence 
Strong Pond. Bible School at 12 M., 
Mr. Willis A. Pride, Superintendent. 
7.30, Evening worship with sermon. 
Rev. L. H. Ruge will preach at 
the Congregational church Sunday 
morning on ‘‘The’ Faithful Ser- 
vant;’’ in the evening on ‘The 
Well-Read Man.”’ 
Musical at Baptist Church 
Tuesday evening the Baptist 
church choir gave a most success- 
ful concert in the church. There 
was a good attendance and it is 
hoped that the choir will be induced 
to follow this with other similar con- 
certs. The program was as follows: 
Organ duet, Festival Prelude, Miss May 
Rogers and G. Allyn Browne. 
Chorus, (A) Evening. 
(B) Down the Rippling River. 
Solo, Serenade, Miss Alice Alderman 
Chorus, (A) Venetian Song 
(B) When Pressed by Soft Slum- 
ber, E. Allan Brown and 
Chorus. 
Organ duet, Romance, Miss May Rogers 
and G. Allyn Browne 
Negro Dialect Selection, 
Charlotte Browne 
Ladies’ Chorus, (A) Doris 
(B) Romance of a Cake 
Shop. 
Reading, Mrs. 
‘against. the 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
The Ellis Bill Will Remove Unfair 
Out-of-State Competition. 
The Ellis Bill will have a distinct 
tendency to encourage the produc- 
tion of milk in Massachusetts, be- 
cause it will remove one of the un- 
just discriminations now operating 
Massachusetts produc- 
ers in favor of the out-of-state pro- 
ducers. It will put all the produc- 
ers on an equal footing as far as in- 
spection is concerned. 
At present many of the Massa- 
chusetts producers are being in- 
spected by local officials, but the 
out-of-state milk does not receive 
the same degree of inspection. 
The chief purpose of the Ellis 
Bill is to provide for this out-of- 
state! inspection, which will cover 
two-thirds of the milk sold in 
Massachusetts. Of course, it will 
also cover places in the State which 
are not now looked after by local 
officials. 
It would be an absurd duplica- 
tion of effort and expense for each 
of the cities and towns which re- 
eeive milk from New Hampshire, 
for instance, to send an inspector 
through that state. 
The State Board of Health can do 
it much more economieally for all, 
and with its state-wide jurisdiction, 
it can much more effectively keep 
dirty milk out of the Massachusetts 
market. 
Thus the Ellis Bill will remove 
the existing unfair competition, and 
will greatly benefit Massachusetts 
producers. 
This has proved a very powerful 
argument for the Ellis Bill, and ac- 
eounts in large measure for the 
change of sentiment among. pro- 
ducers towards that much misrepre- 
sented measure. Our farmers are 
now coming to realize how benefi- 
cial its passage will be to the milk 
industry of Massachusetts. 
Model Milk Farm at Greenland, N.H. 
Cold Spring Farm at Greenland, 
N. H., is one of the model milk 
farms which is attracting consider- 
able attention. Charles Brackett is 
the manager of the farm and he is 
probably one of the _ best-informed 
men in this section on the conduct 
of a business of this kind. On a 
recent visit to the farm our inform- 
ant saw fifty head of the finest of 
Jersey cows. Mr. Brackett sends 
500 quarts of Jersey milk a day to 
the city of Portsmouth, N. H. One 
Miss Alice Alderman 
BE. Allan 
Solo, The Rosary, 
Bass Solo, Three for Jack, 
Brown. 
Organ Solo. Scherzo, G. Allyn Browne 
Chorus, Village Blacksmith. 
of the interesting features of the 
plant is the process of cooling the 
milk. As soon as it is obtained from 
the cows it is turned into a strainer 
which flows down over a_ cone- 
shaped tank filled with ice. By the 
time it reaches the milk receivers it 
is cooled to an ice-chilled tempera- 
ture ready for the bottling process. 
It is then packed in bottles in ice 
boxes ready for the carts. The cow 
stable is of conerete and is 100 feet 
long. An enormous hay barn is lo- 
cated on the farm, some mile from 
the cow stable. All the hay is raised 
on the place. A visit to the farm 
at once impresses one with the 
cleanliness of everything. It would 
repay any one interested to visit 
this farm, which is only a short dis- 
tance from Portsmouth. 
New Topographic Map. 
The State of New York and the 
United States Geological Survey, 
working together, are pushing for- 
ward a complete topographic survey 
of New York State. The surveying 
is being done in rectangular units 
known as quadrangles. Each of 
these units of area includes 15 de- 
grees of longitude by 15 degrees of 
latitude, or about 220 square miles. 
The resulting maps are being pub- 
lished by the Geological Survey, and 
the latest of these maps issued is 
that of the Hammond quadrangle, 
lying in the northern portion of the 
State. This is a comparative little 
settled section, although well tra- 
versed by roads. Oswegatchie River 
flows into the east-central portion of 
the area, trending in a southwester- 
ly direction to the village of Oxbow, 
and then making a radical loop and 
flowing back again in a northeast- 
erly direction. It is interesting to 
note, as shown by the map, that if 
desired it would be a comparatively 
small engineering feat to connect 
the two portions of this river by 
canal near the town of Wegatchie, 
so nearly does the river double on 
its course, and thus create an island 
of considerable extent. 
The topographic surveying of the 
area was done in pe 1910 by J. M. 
Whitman and W. S. Morey, of 
the United States ae ie Survey, 
in cooperation with the State of 
New York. The sheet is a fine ex- 
ample of topographic mapping and 
engraving. The seale of the mup is 
1:62,500, or approximately 1 ineh 
to the contour interval is 20 feet. 
Copies of this and other topo- 
graphic maps of areas in the Stato 
at New York eon be purchased from 
the Director of the Geologicat Sur- 
vey. Washington, D. C., for 5 evnts 
each, 
o = 
Ts anaes sieting 
