Oct. 1, 1915, 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder j 
Right Paint 
means less frequent painting — 
better looks for a longer time. It means 
paint made of 
White Lead 
E. A. LANE 
Manchester, Mass. 
Dutch Boy 
Phoenix 
and pure linseed oil, mixed 
to suit the wood of your 
house and tinted the color 
you desire. 
We carry these materials 
as well as other painting 
requisites. Let us furnish 
materials for a job that 
won't crack, that will last 
for years, that wears 
evenly. 
EQUAL SUFFRAGE NEWS. 
The next Essex County Confer- 
ence,—and probably the last before 
Election Day,—will be held at Lynn, 
on Saturday of this week at the 
Headquarters of the Lynn Suffrage 
League, on Exchange st. Morning 
session at 10.30, lunch at one o’clock, 
followed by an afternoon session. 
This is a very important conference 
and all Essex Co. suffragists are in- 
vited and urged to attend, whether 
they represent special leagues or not. 
Lynn has one of the most efficient 
Suffrage Leagues in this part of the 
state and the city itself is showing 
tremendous Suffrage interest and ac- 
tivity. Gloucester is also very active 
and full of plans for October. The 
president of the Manchester League 
has been asked to speak there on 
Sunday (at a church) and again later 
i, the month, They will have also 
more important speakers including 
Miss Rose Livingstone, the “angel of 
China-town,” who has done such 
wonderful rescue work among young 
girls and who says that all her help 
Forestry 
Experts 
lias come from Suffragists. 
The Manchester League will hold 
its October meeting, for the election 
of officers and other important busi- 
ness, on Wednesday, the 6th, at 3.30 
Q ‘clock, at the home of Mrs. Charles 
Hatch. New members will be wel- 
come. Last business meeting of the 
League before Election Day. Final 
information as to the Parade will be 
given, etc. 
Among the October meetings an- 
nounced by the Suffrage Headquar- 
ters in Boston, are two ‘Sunday meet- 
ings in the Tremont Theatre, one 
next Sunday afternoon and another 
later in the month, (to be announced 
in daily papers), the big rally of the 
Men’s League on the 12th, and the 
mass meeting after the parade on the 
“h (Mechanics Hall)—with many 
es 
The Granges continue to “come in,” 
among the latest being the W alpole, 
Billerica, Whitman, Hingham, Fast 
Bridgewater and Winchester Granges. 
The Winchester Grange passed the 
resolution endorsing Equal Suffrage 
for Mass., eed y after hearing 
R. E. Henderson 
Box 244, Beverly, Mass. Telephone 
Mrs. A. J. George’ speak-for Anti- 
Suffrage! Yet Mrs. George is count- 
ed the chief speaker of the Antis. A 
newspaper man who heard her speak 
at the Women’s City club of Boston, 
told me that she was “an unscrupu- 
lous speaker who could fool some 
kinds of audience.” It seems that she 
cannot fool real Massachusetts people. 
The Antis are again paying the 
Suffragists the compliment of imitat- 
ing them, and making a very hurried 
automobile tour of the state with two 
or three men speakers. The Anti 
women feel unequal to presenting 
their cause in the open-air,—but it 
was only the other day that they feit 
it “unwomanly” to speak in_ halls, 
which they have now learnt to do 
with great pride. Thus they come 
“following after!’ This state tour 
has been made necessary to them by 
the great success of the Suffrage 
Campaigners, in every county. The 
Anti speaker called Col. Irish “of 
California” is making the unscrupu- 
lous and ridiculous statement that the 
women of California would like to 
have the ballot taken away froin 
them again. He would have great 
difficulty to verify this statement, and 
would not dare to make it in Cali- 
fornia, where the women made one 
of the finest fights in the history of 
Suffrage, and have been using the 
ballot intelligently and_ effectively 
ever since they won it. Against the 
loose statements of these wunrepre- 
sentative men who are speaking 
against women, we have the state- 
ments of the Governors of Suffrage 
states, who assembled in Boston ist 
summer (including Gov. Johnson of 
Cal.) and of such great women as 
Jane Addams, as to he success and 
worth of Woman Suffrage in’ the 
western states. It seems as H thought- 
ful people in Mass. will be able to 
discriminate! Let me add the testi- 
mony of the Spokane Daily Chromcle, 
a non-partisan paper in the state cf 
Washington,, which in reply to ques- 
tions from Mass. as to the success of . 
Equal Suffrage there, replied:—"“A 
five years’ test of Equal Suffrage has 
brought into action a tremendous new 
force for honesty, better morals, tem- 
perance and cleaner living. Tt has 
multiplied the list of independent 
voters. And it has aroused keener 
interest in the duties of the govern- 
ment to the poor, the sick and the un- 
fortunate.” —L. R. S. 
Why not patronize a local institu- 
‘ion with your prin*‘ng? 
Leopard Moth 
WV OLS ern 
