10 
North Shore Breeze 
Published every Friday afternoon by 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE CO. | 
33 Beach Street Manchester, Mass. 
J. ALEX. LODGE, Editor. 
Telephones: Manchester 378, 132-M. 
Subscription rates: $2.00 a year; 3 months (trial) 50 cents. 
Advertising rates on application. 
Address all communications and make checks payable to 
North Shore Breeze Co., Manchester, Mass. 
Entered as second-class matter at the Manchester, Mass,., 
Postoffice. 
VOL. XIV 
October 20, 1916. No. 42 
In Att or THE CHURCHES next Sunday envelopes. 
are to be distributed to the parishioners to be taken home, 
a contribution placed therein and returned the following 
Sunday and deposited in the collection plates as they are 
passed. These envelopes read: “please take this en: 
velope home with you. Bring it back to church next 
Sunday, October 29, with a contribution for the Beverly 
Hospital enclosed and deposited with the regular collec- 
tion when taken. The treasurer of the Hospital will 
gladly acknowledge contributions if the contributor cares 
to fill in name and address below. The Beverly Hospital 
receives no financial assistance from city or state and 1s 
dependent upon private contributions for support.” The 
funds of the Hospital are not large enough to maintain 
the work and appeals are made and must be made every 
year. The Beverly Hospital has served the entire North 
Shore and its presence is an assurance to everyone. All 
of the North Shore towns have received the benefits of 
the institution. Last year eighty-one persons were treat- 
ed who live in Manchester. There were fifty-five from 
Beverly Farms and Pride’s Crossing, while there were 
twenty-one from Wenham and thirty-five from Hamilton. 
The Hospital cared for over one thousand different per- 
sons and through them touched the lives of many more. 
The work done is of a high order and second to none in 
the state, considering hospitals of its size. While the 
hospital is in Beverly it is by the very necessities of its 
situation a “North Shore” hospital. Here is an oppor- 
tunity for everyone to respond to the appeal the churches 
are making and give the hospital a generous collection. 
Tur PRESIDENT has issued a universal call for help 
for the suffering men and women in Armenia. Only the 
multiplicity of the demands which are being made upon 
the purse strings and the hearts of the people would have 
*made such an appeal necessary. America has been 
loyally doing its duty these hard days and there have 
been so many needs that the average person is simply 
overwhelmed. The Armenian cause needs help and 
quickly. America cannot fail; she must not! 
THe Prourpirionists have gained a front column 
newspaper campaign notice, thanks to the accommodating 
skill of an irate man who sent a stone crashing through 
a window to strike the vice-presidential candidate. No 
harm was done but the publicity the incident afforded 
gave the campaign unexpected publicity. 
Tur Mosgurro CAMPAIGN goes on despite the 
weather. Preparedness is the great word. The marshes 
are now being prepared for the coming season. 
Waste May Br SEEN on every side, but it remained 
for Dr. Turner at the Brotherhood meeting in Manches- 
ter, to present the great subject in its broadest phases. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
~ Wig? tne. wel” at pa in 
‘ 
Wuitxe America Has Fep the starving of Furope | 
and Turkey 200,000 women and children in Albania have 
died of starvation, according to William Willard Howard, — 
secretary of the Balkan Relief Fund. Albania has paid 
the penalty of the “innocent bystander.” 
in the war herself, she fed and sheltered the fleeing Ser- 
“_ 
Taking no part — 
bians with her slender resources until they became ex- — 
hausted. Today women and children gnaw the carcasses 
of dead horses in the streets to satisfy their hunger. Mr. 
Howard, who has returned from his third trip to the 
hunger zone of Europe, says corn is fifty dollars a bushel - 
in Albania and flour, eighty dollars a sack» Albania has 
taken no part in the war, neither has she resisted the in-— 
vasion of her territory, yet the sufferings of Belgium fade 
into insignificance beside those of Serbia’s neighbor. 
Belgium, but in hungering Albania almost a quarter of 
a million innocent ones have died of starvation. Mr. 
Howard hopes to return to Albania with a ship-load of 
supplies. Contributions may be made through the Balkan 
Relief Fund, 70 Fifth Ave., New York City. 
Tue Visit 
adventure of a merchant marine. It was a skilful man- 
ceuver manipulated by skilful men to obtain a ruling by 
the authorities in America. The ruling was given and 
the Deutchland was permitted to enter and leave without 
Not. 
a woman nor child has expired because of hunger in 
OF THE DEUTCHLAND was more than the — 
ae 
challenge and under the full protection of the neutral — 
rights of a neutral port. Then comes the U-53 for a 
short stay at Newport followed quickly by the Nantucket 
incidents. The German naval authorities are skilful men 
end their international strategy has improved somewhat 
since the war began. Whether the ruling of our govern- 
ment would stand the test of an international court re- 
mains for the future to decide. It is, however, unfor- 
tunate that the question of the status of submarine was 
not determined in the days of peace before the war came ° 
on. 
Tue Campaicn Is A WEEK OLDER, and election is 
one week nearer. There has been no marked change in 
the attitudes of the candidates to the major issues. There 
is still time for either candidate to win and lose the good 
will of the voters. It is quite evident, even to a super- 
ficial observer, that both candidates have _a contest on 
and while it would appear that Hughes is very much in 
the lead, that lead is not so pronounced as to permit any 
lagging in the campaign. The campaign has really but 
just begun and both parties realize it. ; 
Tue UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT has decided that 
money as well as munition are no longer “to be made” 
America for consumption in Mexico. 
pational “bunconen” have been making money by the 
wholesale. The printing has been done within the borders 
of the United States. Now Uncle Sam has issued orders 
for the nefarious traffic to stop. No more money can 
be made in America until the United States Government 
has been convinced that there is value back of the issue 
printed. Uncle Sam is to have a hard task teaching the 
southern republic the lessons of thrift, government and 
honesty, but it is a task that must be done. 
Tur MANCHESTER WoMAN’s CLuB has announced 
its program for the year and it is of its usual high order. 
For nearly a decade it has been a valuable organization 
in the life of the town. The social opportunities which 
its program presents have been recognized and appreciated . 
by the women of Manchester. Its interest and support of 
the District Nursing Fund is but one intimation of the 
spirit and energies of the society. 
Speculators and - 
