20 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
April 30, 1915 
23 per cent Saving in Fuel 
112 PINE STREET, 
JOHN F. SCOTT 
PLUMBING AND HEATING 
AGENT FOR SPENCER MAGAZINE BOILERS 
Gall for Demonstration and Circulars 
OVERHEAD EXPENSES REDUCED 
LOWEST ESTIMATES ON ALL WORK ON REQUEST 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, MASS. 
H. Higginson, Pres. 
W. B. Calderwood, Supt. 
G. W. McGuire, Treas. 
DAVID FENTON CoO, Manchester-by-the-Sea 
MASS. 
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. 
e 
Manchester 
Request. 
Office: 
241 GUMMER STREET 
OMOMORKROROKOLOROMOAOKLOROBLOBVOVOUO 
AOS 
Last WEEK oF “A Mopern Eve.” 
One of the big theatrical successes 
of the season, “A Modern Eve,” 
opens its last week at the Cort, Bos- 
ton, next Monday. It is not hard to 
understand the popularity of this 
musical comedy, whose producers 
have taken all the qualities that 
please audiences, and gone just one 
step further than anybody else in 
putting them before the public. ‘T‘o 
begin with they were lucky in getting 
a play with a consistent story in it, 
a story on an up-to-date topic, clean 
and wittily handled. ‘The “Modern 
Eve” is a woman lawyer, a brusque, 
business-like person who keeps her 
husband washing the dishes and run- 
ning the house, and who brings up 
her daughters to be painters and 
physicians. 
To her comes her old lover of 
twenty years ago, and the feminist 
disappears in the woman. Inter- 
woven with this comedy of love are 
QVOVOBOBMBOOKROORBOORNOOMBOOKNOOBBOOMNOOBBOOMNO ONE OORBOONY 
ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER 
Estimates on Cable Construction Furnished on 
a 
MROOUKOORKOORNOOKHOOUROOKE OO OOM OORROOMNOOKRHOOUNOMOKONOS 
0 
4, 
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Flectric Co. 
Telephone 168W 
A. LOVERING, Manager 
AON OKOKOROLOBOROROBOROKOKLOBOROKROKO 
the stories of the two daughters, 
real love stories. And in a whim- 
sical melange, involving the trial for 
divorce of one of the daughters, a 
merry plot is carried consistently 
through the evening. 
Not Ambitious.—The teacher sent 
the son of Newburgh politician be- 
fere the schoolmaster for a serious 
misdemeanor. 
‘““Young man,’’ said the school- 
master, as he gazed severely at the 
youth, ‘‘do you know that you are 
a candidate for a severe whipping ?’’ 
‘““Yes, sir,’’ replied the boy, ‘‘and 
I hope I’ll be defeated.’’—New- 
burgh Journal. 
A cynic is a person who knows the 
price of everything and the value of 
nothing. 
Probably every man on earth has 
rheumatism, dyspepsia or some other 
hobby. 
MANCHESTER 
The annual business meeting and 
election of officers of the Arbella 
club will be held in the Chapel next 
Tuesday, May 4, at 4 o’clock. 
Miss Vera Kitfield was surprised 
by about forty of her friends, who 
gave her a utility shower Monday 
evening at her home on Summer st., 
Manchester Cove. Mrs. Robert 
Stoops was in charge of the party. 
Educator shoes at W.R.Bell’s. adv. 
At the annual meeting of the 
Thought and Work club, Salem’s 
leading woman’s club, Mrs. Emma A. 
Missud was elected president for a 
third consecutive year. Mrs. Missud 
is a frequent visitor to the Manches- 
ter Woman’s club and is well known 
here. 
Two automobiles collided at the 
bridge over the railroad at West 
Manchester, Sunday afternoon, but 
fortunately nobody was injured. A 
6-cyl. Hudson owned by Arthur &. 
Moreau of 1127 Elm st., Manches- 
ter, had turned onto the bridge from 
Tuck’s Point just as a Ford touring 
car, owned by C. B. Maloon of 340 
Eastern ave., Lynn, was on the 
bridge on its way toward the West 
Manchester station. In the larger 
car were two men, two women and 
five children; in the Ford were two 
men and two women. As the larger 
car struck the Ford, in swinging 
around the sharp curve, there was an 
awful smash, but most fortunately 
no serious damage was done except 
to the cars. 
As To SEWER RATES 
Manchester, Mass., 
_ .. Apnl 28, ‘191s. 
Editor North Shore Breeze, 
Dear Sir: In attending the past 
town meetings I was surprised at the 
opposition by some of the citizens, to 
what appeared to be just and equit- 
able rates for the use of the new 
sewer, and also at the injustice of the 
attempt being made to put all costs 
of running new sewers on the gen- 
eral tax levy. I do not think it right 
or fair, that a citizen not having the 
use of the sewer, should pay equally 
with those that have, and then have 
to pay the cost of getting rid of his 
own sewage extra. It seems to me 
that the only fair way, if such a 
proposition carries, is to authorize 
the Sewer Commissioners to take 
and dispose of all sewage in the town 
limits, placing everyone on an equal 
footing. 
Do unto others, as you would they 
should do to you! 
FRANK Foster, 
Smith’s Point, 
