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April 16, 1915 
MANCHESTER 
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roberts and 
their children of Salem were in town 
Sunday visiting John Allen and fam- 
ily, Washington st. 
Mrs. Walter Mullen and. her 
daughter, Miss Helen Mullen, re- 
turned last Friday from a_week’s 
visit to Watertown, their former 
home. 
The annual meeting of the Story 
High School Alumni will be held at 
the home of Frank L. Floyd, Wed- 
mesday evening, April 21, at 7.30 
o'clock. 
An alarm was telephoned in Tues- 
day afternoon from the W. J. Mit- 
chell estate at the Cove for a brush 
fire, which threatened the building 
next to the garage, and gained consid- 
erable headway before discovered. 
The building is used for storing 
gasoline and serious consequences 
Was apprehended but the prompt 
work of those about the place had 
practically done away with all dan- 
ger before the fire «department ar- 
rived. The fire is believed to have 
been caused by a cigaret thrown 
among the dead leaves near the 
building by a passer-by. No dam- 
age was done to the building. 
COMMUNICATION 
Editor North Shore Breeze, 
Dear Sir :— 
The account in your recent issue 
of the record of the last legislature 
in Wyoming is indeed exciting, for 
the laws listed therein are all admir- 
able. In our excitement, however, 
let us not forget that most of them 
have been in force in Massachusetts 
for some time in practically the 
same, or better, form than those 
Wyoming has just enacted, and let 
us also remember that it has taken 
Wyoming 46 years of woman’s suf- 
frage to get where Massachusetts 
arrived with male suffrage consider- 
ably earlier. It reminds me of the 
countryman whose dogs ran off after 
a bear. The farmer followed as fast 
as he could, but, unable to keep pace 
with them, he inquired of the first 
man he met if he had seen any dogs 
and bear along that road. ‘“Yaas,” 
Sig.tne iman, ~Yaas, 1 seen ’em.” 
“Well,” said the farmer, “how were 
they?” “Weill,” said the man, “the 
dogs was a leetle ahead, but the bar 
was a gainin’.” Wyoming’s experi- 
ence may be taken as pointing to the 
retarding effect of woman’s suffrage 
on good legislation. 
Mrs. Wini1am LoweLL PUTNAM. 
Apr. 14, I9QI5. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
The New England Trust Company 
BOSTON, MASS. 
Capital $1,000,000 
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JAMES R. HOOPER, President 
ARTHUR ADAMS, Vice-President ALEXANDER COCHRANE, Vice-Pres. 
GEORGE WIGGLESWORTH, \V.-Pres)5 HENRY N. MARR, Secretary 
FREDERICK W. ALLEN, Treasurer FRANCIS R. JEWETT, Trust Officer 
THOMAS E. EATON, Asst. Treasurer ORRIN C. HART, Asst. Trust Cfficer 
EDWARD B. LADD, Asst. Treasurer JAS. H. SAWYER, Man. Safe Dep. Vaults 
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@SeaTric 
Message No. 5 
To the Business Men of Manchester By the Sea 
The prosperity of a city is in direct proportion to the local pride. 
pride runs high, prosperity has a firm foothold. 
live and do business in. 
Paint helps to a remarkable degree in spreading an impression of prosperity 
throughout a community. It gives a fresh, new, inviting look wherever it is used. 
Municipal buildings, stores and homes feel its good effects. Growing business is 
bound to be one of the direct results of a liberal use of paint, not from any magic 
in the paint, but because of the pride which is stimulated. 
Phoenix White Lead 
(Dutch Boy Painter Trade Mark) 
Where local 
Such a town is a good place to 
mixed with pure linseed oil is the paint of quality and always has been. Lasting 
and econorzical, Get in touch with us today. We carry all painting requisites. 
E. A. LANE, MANCHESTER 
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