_— * 
May 21, 1915 
a 
- 
Now Open For the Season 
THE SUNSET COTTAGE 
Miss M. G. Walsh, Prop. 
Magnolia Avenue, Magnolia, Mass. 
Centrally locaced, near Beach. 
aS oe ee ee ee re 
Everything homelike. 
r 
; Transients Accommodated 
4 Reasonable Rates 
Board by the Day or By the Week 
q Special Arrangements made for 
" - Supper Parties to Order 
r Telephone 8586-W 
; . . ‘ 
expressing their loyalty to the Ad- 
ministration at this time of crisis. 
The same was sent to the President. 
The Manchester League had a 
quiet but very charming observance 
of Suffrage Day on Saturday last, at 
the house of Rev. and Mrs. Charles 
A. Hatch. Reports of the Conven- 
tion and plans for more work were 
_ brightened by a social hour, with tea, 
spring flowers and music, Miss Flor- 
ence Leach singing two beautiful 
songs. 
The season of open-air meetings 
has now begun, both in Boston and 
in the towns. The first ones in this 
district came on Tuesday evening in 
_ Gloucester, with a big crowd, and on 
Wednesday afternoon in Magnolia 
village. Miss Luscomb and Mrs. 
McDaniel spoke at both of these 
meetings, and will come to Manches- 
ter later. 
I have been asked to reply to the 
attack by “J. W.” in last week's 
Breeze, also to the outrageous re- 
marks of Mr. Robert Luce at the 
 Anti-Suffrage meeting in Boston last 
- Saturday night. I really have not 
the time or space to waste in answer- 
ing all the nonsense that the Antis 
(or some of them) continue to re- 
peat, regardless of our corrections, 
our appeal for truth and fair play. 
_ They have been answered again and 
again,—as you can find by looking 
up back numbers of the BREEZE! 
But it is better to go forward than 
back, so we cheerfully continue our 
good work in spite of the falsehoods 
about the “failure” of equal suffrage 
in Colorado, about legislation for wo- 
men and children in this state and 
New York being better than in the 
Suffrage states, and all the rest of it. 
Both the tone and details of J. W.’s 
letter were false and misleading. One 
cannot answer that sort of thing. 
And Mr. Lace insulted American 
woman with every word he spoke,—- 
how can self-respecting women al- 
low him to be their spokesman? The 
truth seems to be that the Antis are 
hard pressed for speakers and for 
arguments and so they resort to at- 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
When Making 
A Toll Gall 
These things are Worth Remembering: 
There will be no charge on a particular party 
call if you are not connected with the person 
whose name you have given to the toll operator. 
(Two-number calls cannot be made for a specified person, and 
such calls will be charged for if there is any answer by the station 
which has been called. 
Y hen we cares 
ou can obtain rates to any place by asking for 
the toll operator. 
such a call. 
There will be no charge for 
If you want the toll operator to report to you the 
actual cost of the call, when the message is com- 
pleted, please ask her to do so when you give the 
order for the call. 
If the person wanted has no telephone, we will try 
* to arrange, for a small additional message charge, 
to have him called to a pay station. 
When you leave your office or home, tell someone 
where you are going. 
follow you. 
Then your toll calls may 
New England ‘Telephone 
and Telegraph Company 
AY TELEPHONE 
— —< 
Irving W. Rolfe, anager 
tacks and fictions. It is deplorable, 
but we know that their days are 
numbered, they are desperate, and 
we can afford to be patient. 
TENEMENTS or 
ROOMS TO RENT— 
This is the season of year when 
the Breeze is besieged by people 
who want to procure apart- 
ments and rooms on the North 
Shore for summer. Advertise- 
ments inserted in the Breeze 
classified columns have brought 
prompt returns to others—why 
not you? , The cost is trivial. 
Results are what count. 
The Breeze $2 a year postpaid. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
The § Girls’ club” of* the Baptist 
church have their annual “at home” 
Tuesday evening, May 25th, when 
they entertain their parents and 
friends, and refreshments will be 
served. There will be an exhibit of 
basketry done by the club during the 
year. 
MAGNOLIA 
“Breezy Point,” the comedy, which 
the Foster club is to give in aid of 
the Piano Fund for the Blynman 
Gra‘rmar school, has been postponed 
until Tuesday evening, June 1, when 
it will be presented at the Women’s 
clubhouse on the Shore road. 
