Sept. 29, 1916. 
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 
J Received too late for Insertion on 
; Regular Page . 
CHAUFFEUR — Situation wanted 
for an excellent chauffeur. Mrs. 
Charles Dalton, Beverly Farms. 
Tel. 113. 39-1t 
WANTED—Clean rags, with buttons 
removed, suitable for wiping ma- 
chinery. Will pay 8c a pound.— 
Tue BREEZE OFFICE. * 
War PicturES IN MANCHESTER 
Town HALL. 
One of the most representative 
North Shore audiences which has ever 
gathered in Manchester assembled in - 
the Town ‘hall last Saturday evening 
to witness the first public exhibition 
of moving pictures ever given in the 
town. ‘The pictures showed the work 
of the American Ambulance Corps in 
France, of which A. Piatt Andrew of 
Gloucester is Inspector-General. The 
entertainment was given under the 
management of Henry Sleeper, and 
the proceeds, which will amount to 
considerably more than $1000, will be 
devoted to the work of the ambulance 
corps. 
Leslie Buswell, a young English 
actor who has seen service in France, 
lectured upon the pictures. He was 
introduced by Maj. Henry Lee Hig- 
ginson, who made a stirring appeal 
for the assistance of the American 
people in this work, reminding his 
hearers that France gave this country 
timely aid when she stood in need of 
it. 
Tickets for the show cost $2.50 
each. 
Caller: ““That’s a very good cake. 
Did you make it yourself?” Hostess: 
“No, I didn’t, and I’m never going to 
make another cake. George was per- 
fectly horrid about the last one. He 
broke a tooth over it and said I ought 
to be making munitions.” —E-xchange. 
“Dad,” said the young medical 
graduate, “in your two weeks’ absence 
I managed to cure Mrs. Goldenby of 
her indigestion.” “My boy,” said the 
old doctor, “I’m proud of you, of 
course, but Mrs. Goldenby’s indiges- 
tion was what put you through col- 
lege.”—Boston Transcript. 
Mrs. Lafferty: “Tin stitches did th’ 
doctor have to take in me ould man!” 
Mrs. O’Hara: “Tin, was it, only tin? 
Sure when th’ doctor seen me poor 
husban’ carried fr’ th’ wreck on th’ 
railroad, he sez, sez he, ‘Do there be 
no wan here wid such a t’ing as a 
sewin’ machine?’ ”—Judge. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
— 
~] 
PLUMBING Tel. 12 
HEATING 
John F. Scott 
The turning on and shutting off water for the season a specialty 
Personal attention to all work 
References if desired 
33 years experience 
SHOP AND OFFICE: 112 PINE ST. 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
Edward §. Knight 
FLORIST 
Flowers for all Occasions 
ESTABLISHED 1884 
Everything for the Garden. 
40 SCHOOL STREET 
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH, MANn- 
CHESTER. 
Church work will begin in full 
force at the Congregational church 
Sunday morning. After an absence 
of six Sundays the choir, under the 
efficient direction of Mr. George Sar- 
gent, will be back in their old places. 
The Go-To-Church band also is or- 
ganized and the last opportunity for 
members to join will be given then. 
Already the enrollment promises a 
record breaker membership. For the 
benefit of those who are planning to 
join this term a word of explanation 
may not be out of place. The object 
of joining is to attend church Sunday 
morning every Sunday for four 
months. This seems easy, but expert- 
ence has shown that faithfulness is 
tested quite severely. Every Sunday the 
member brings his coupon and puts it 
into a box which is in the front of the 
church; but in the case of the juniors 
they bring their cards to the person 
at the door, who punches their ticket 
and at the same time makes a record 
of his own. For good reasons two 
absences are allowed, but they must 
be made up by attending two evening 
services for each absence. 
Sunday, October 15, is designated 
by the National Council of Congre- 
gational churches as “Tercentenary 
Sunday.” The aim on that Sunday 
Tel. 10 
MANCHESTER 
will be to set before Congregational 
churches what they are to accomplish 
before 1920—three hundred years 
after the landing of the Pilgrims. 
What the churches hope to accom- 
plish may be summed up in a few 
words: to study the applicability of 
Pilgrim convictions at the present 
day; to add a half a million new 
members to the church before 1920; 
to stimulate an interest among young 
men of today in the direction of the 
ministry and other Christian work; 
to raise two million dollars a year for 
church work; to build in the year 
1920 a fitting memorial to the Pil- 
erims. 
There will be a rehearsal of the 
choir Saturday evening in the church. 
Mr. Sargent will be present. 
The annual meeting of the Wom- 
an’s Missionary society will be held 
in the Congl. chapel Thursday, Oct. 
5, at 4 o’clock. Supper will be served 
at 6 o'clock. 
About 15 members of the local 
Christian Endeavor societies attend- 
ed the monthly meeting of the Salem 
Union at North Beverly on Monday 
evening. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. 
adv. 
Felt hats for fall wear. The Gift 
Shop. adv. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
Lehigh Valley Coal Sales Company 
COAL 
SAMUEL KNIGHT SONS COMPANY 
32 CENTRAL STREET 
TELEPHONE 202 
MANCHESTER, MASS. 
