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MANCHESTER. 
Orthodox Cong’! Church. 
Rev. L. H. Ruge, Pastor 
Sunday morning worship at 10.45. 
Sunday School 12m. Y. P. S. C. E. 
6.00 in the Chapel, evening worship 
7.00. Prayer meeting Tuesday 7.30 p.m. 
Baptist Church. 
Rev. Theodore Lyman Frost, Minister. 
Sunday morning worship at 10.45. 
Bible School 12.00 m. B. Y. P. U. 
6.00 in the vestry. Evening worship 
7.00. Prayer meetings Tuesday and Fri- 
day evenings 7.30. 
Sacred Heart Church. 
Rev. Mark J. Sullivan. 
- Sunday Masses: 7, 8.30 and 10.30 a. 
m. Rosary and Benediction of the Bless- 
ed Sacrament Sunday afternoon at 3.30. 
Week-day Mass at the Chapel at 7.30 
. a. Mm. 
Next Sunday Rev. T. L. Frost of the 
Baptist church will speak on the first of 
a new series of sermons on ‘‘The 
Christian Church;’’ in the evening on 
** Salvation by Luck.’’ The series on 
the Christian Church is as follows: 
Jan. 30, ‘‘The Church in the Gos- 
pels;’’ Feb. 13, “‘ The Church Mili- 
tant;’’ Feb. 20, “‘ The Church Tri- 
umphant;’’ Feb. 27, ‘“The Church a 
Democracy;’’ Mar. 13, Binding and 
Loosing.’’ 
The Ladies’ Social Circle held a suc- 
cessful supper and entertainment at the 
Chapel Wednesday evening. ‘The sup- 
per was served on the lunch counter 
plan. The entertainment consisted of 
piano selections by Miss Florence Kauff- 
man and a sketch, entitled ‘‘ School.’ 
This play was given at a recent meeting 
of the S. H. S. Literary Society and the 
parts were all taken by High School 
pupils. 
The children of the Junior Sunday 
School of the Congregational church in- 
vite their friends to a Valentine party to 
be given at the Chapel Saturday after- 
noon, Feb. 12, from 2.30 to 5.30. 
Attractive valentines of various kinds will 
be for sale. You can mail them to your 
friends at Cupid office and have them 
delivered by competent postmen. Use- 
ful articles made by the children and 
home-made candy will be for sale. An 
entertainment in honor of St. Valentine 
will be presented at 3.30. A large at- 
tendance would encourage the children 
and make them feel that their friends are 
interested in the work they are doing. 
The money will be used to renew the 
children’s Sunday School library. Ad- 
mission, 10 cents; children 10 or under 
5 cents. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
19 
LASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT 
SE SE Se ne ir Re el 
Advertisements under this head at 1 cent per word the first week. 
One-half cent 
STAMPS may be mailed in payment. 
per word after the first week. -i- 
For Sale, over 12,000 
HOUSE LOT sq. ft.; good location. 
Very easy terms. Apply to E. P. STANLEY, 
Manchester. 
HOUSE LOTS on Norwood Avenue, 
Lincoln and Vine 
streets, Manchester, cheap, easy terms. Ap- 
ply E. P. STANLEY, Manchester. 512 
TWO COTTAGES £2 sale in, Man- 
chester. New. 
six rooms, hot and cold water, bath rooms, 
modern and up-to-date. apply to M. BH, 
GORMAN, Manchester. BT? 
FOR SALE 
Land and Buildings in East Wenham near 
Beverly Farms line. For particulars apply to 
BOX 265, Beverly Farms P. O. 
Miss GLADYS TRULL 
Of Pride’s Crossing 
Announces to the people of Manchester that she 
is prepared to give lessons on the 
Piano and Pipe-Organ 
and that her services may be secured 
as accompanist. 
Let us figure on your next order of 
PRINTING 
North Shore Breeze 
Edison Looks Into the Future. 
Thomas A. Edison, looking into the 
future, thinks the prospect of the labor- 
ing man is a particularly bright one. 
“*Tn 200 years, by the cheapening of 
commodities, the ordinary laborer will 
live as well as a man does now with 
$200,000 annual income. Automatic 
machinery and _ scientific agriculture 
will bring about this result,’’ Mr. Edi- 
son says, in the current issue of the 
Independent. ‘‘ Not individualism, but 
social labor, will dominate the future. 
““'The work day, I believe, will be 
eight hours. Every man needs that 
much work to keep him out of mischief 
and to keep him happy. 
** The clothes of the future will be so 
cheap that every young woman will be 
able to follow the fashions promptly, and 
there will be plenty of fashions. 
“The monorail does not appeal to 
me. It wasa fundamental mistake that 
our railroads were built on a four-foot 
nine inch gauge instead of a six foot 
gauge, which we will probably have to 
come to yet. 
‘* The aeroplane of the future will, I 
think, have to be on the helicopter 
principle. A successful air machine 
OFFICE OF TOWN TREASURER 
MANCHESTER, MASS. 
All bills due the Town of Manchester must 
be paid on or before the end of the Financial 
year January 31, 1910. 
All claims against the Town must be present- 
ed on or before Jan. 27, 1910. 
The last Pay Day will be on Jan. 29, 1910. 
EDwIn P. STANLEY, 
Town Treasurer. 
NOTICE 
OFFICE OF PARK COMMISSIONERS 
TOWN OF MANCHESTER, MASS., 
Jang 13 e191 0; 
The Park Commissioners herewith give notice 
that on and after Jan. 22, 1910, no sand or mat- 
erial will be allowed to be taken from Singing 
Beach, Manchester, Mass. 
Per Order of Board, 
Frank A. Rowe, 
Horace STANDLEY, 
J. S. Reep. 
must be able to defy the winds If 
Wright's aeroplane had one-twentieth of 
its surface, the wind would not affect it. 
““ Chemical food has been worked out 
pretty well by Emil Fischer and his  stu- 
dents, but it won’t bea commercial prop- 
osition. You can’t beat the farm as a 
laboratory, commercially speaking. 
‘* Society will have to stop this whiskey 
business, which is like throwing sand in 
the bearings of a steam engine. 
‘* Among the many problems which 
await solution in the future, one of the 
most important is to get the full value out 
of fuel. The wastefulness of our pres- 
ent methods of combustion is tremend- 
ous. 
““ We may discover the germ of get- 
ting allthe power from fuel tomorrow, 
and then again it may take a long time to 
find out. 
*“To get rid of friction in our ma- 
chines is one of the future problems. 
The only machine without friction that 
we knowis the world, and it moves in 
the resistless ether.’’ | 
Money may not buy happiness, but it 
will buy all the other things that happi- 
ness ought to have. 
