i8 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
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JOHN F. SCOTT 
PLUMBING AND HEATING 
PERSONAL SUPERVISION. 
NOTICE. 
FIRST CLASS LABOR AND 
ESTIMATES AND SPECIFICATIONS AT SHORT 
MATERIAL ONLY. TESTING OF 
DRAINAGE A SPECIALTY. 
110 PINE STREET, 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, MASS. 
H. Higginson, Pres. 
W. B. Calderwood, Supt. 
G. W. McGuire, Treas. 
DAVID FENTON CoO, Manchester-by-the-Sea 
Marine Railways, Boat Builders 
Paints, Oils Varnish, Cordage, and all kinds of Hardware constantly on hand 
Yacht and Boat Repairing of every description, Yacht Tenders always in stock. 
Boats stored for the winter. 
ment of Launches. 
We carry everything appertaining to the equip- 
Spray Hoods Made to Order. 
towed in and out of channel, free of charge. 
Boats hauled on our railways, 
Telephone 254 Manchester. 
S03 2,20,8, 
"eee oe 
NBwOe BOBO. WWOOMG 
Manchester 
Request. 
Office: 
a1 GUMMER STREET 
SOM OMONONONOMONOMOSIO HOMONOROBOHORO Z 
WILBUR THEATRE 
Easter week found “A Pair of 
Sixes” enjoying its fifteenth week at 
the Wilbur Theatre, already having 
broken all records for Boston, and 
still attracting the biggest and happi- 
est audiences i in the city. It is super- 
fiuous to say anything more about the 
wonderful merits of this great farce, 
as over 160,000 Boston. people have 
already seen it, and each one has told 
his or her friend not to miss this 
play. So much has already been 
said and written concerning the en- 
joyable qualities of “A Pair of 
Sixes” that it is hard to add any 
complimentary phrases. Any show 
that keeps an audience laughing up- 
roariously for three hours, and can 
do it for 125 performances in Boston, 
must be a remarkable play. 
Buy your wall papers from H. S. 
Tappan, 17 Bridge street, Manches- 
ter. adv. 
SOO 
ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER 
Estimates on Cable Construction Furnished on 
ay 
MAOOUKOORROOKNOOKHOOMBOOKNOOKKOOLKEOORROOMROOKROORUOMOKMOKO. 
Seo 
2329 2,94, 2.09.8, 0,9¢,9. 
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BWROOKY 
Electric Co. 
Telephone 168W 
A. LOVERING, Manager 
ononokonononononononononononononons 
“TONIGHT’s THE NIGHT” 
“Tonight’s the Night,” a delightful 
musical comedy, presented by the fa- 
mous London Gaiety Company, and 
fresh from its successful run of 
nearly five months at the Shubert 
Theatre, New York, is now dupli- 
cating its metropolitan success at the 
Shubert Theatre, Boston, where it 
opened last Monday night. 
The London Gaiety Theatre is fa- 
mous from one end of the civilized 
world to the other as the home and 
fountain-head of musical comedy. it 
was there that musical comedy was 
born, that this peculiar and distinc- 
tive form of light entertainment first 
had its being. Countless Gaiety 
pieces have been hitherto presented 
in America, but never by the all- 
English companies originally appear- 
ing in them in London, and with a 
background of real “Gaiety gells.” 
Swett’s Fish Market, 163-W. adv. 
April 9, 1915 
MANCHESTER BROTHERHOOD 
“Trt MopeRN ‘TREATMENT OF THK 
CRIMINAL,” SuByEcT OF INTER- 
ESTING TALK. 
The Manchester Brotherhood 
meeting of last Monday night was 
probably one of the most interesting 
of the season. To an. exceedingly 
large audience Rey. Robert Walker, 
chaplain of Massachusetts Reform- 
atory, delivered a fine address on 
“The Modern ‘Treatment of the 
Criminal.” 
The meeting was opened with the 
usual song service, followed by the 
reading of the minutes of the last 
two meetings,—the report of the 
secretary being omitted at the last 
assembly of the  Brotherhood,— 
Ladies’ Night. The business before 
the society was then transacted,— 
should the Brotherhood meet on 
April 19, Patriot’s Day. It was voted 
that the usual meeting would take 
place on that evening. 
“Can you tell by looking in the face 
of a prisoner what the offence may 
be?” querried Mr, Walker in his 
opening remarks. One cannot desig- 
nate from the outward appearance the 
charge against a prisoner. John 
Reed, a noted criminal, was a man 
of refinement, well educated, and 
with a strong personality. He was 
serving sentence for gambling. Out- 
wardly he possessed all the appear- 
ance of a gentleman. The speaker 
told of other cases, and said that ap- 
pearances are deceiving. 
The beginning of crime, said Mr. 
Walker is often due to negligence on 
the part of the parents. For in- 
stance, a small boy was making more 
or less noise in his home, disturbing 
his father, who was trying to enjoy 
his evening paper. The father get- 
ting irritable told the boy to go out- 
side and play. The boy did so, and 
like many other boys, become a 
member of the “after dark club,” a 
club which every town or city is 
known to have, no matter how large 
or how small. At first the boys were 
out for fun, which shortly ripened in- 
to mischief, and later developed into 
crime. 
There are three kinds of criminals. 
First we have the defective delin- 
quents, those whose minds have 
stopped developing at a very early 
stage in life, “a man with a boy’s 
mind.” A great many of this class 
are cared for in private homes and 
sanitoriums. 
Second comes the accidental. 
There are many crimes committed 
through temptation. Although a 
person has no thoughts of stealing, 
if a great temptation comes before 
