10 
MANCHESTER 
A daughter was born Tuesday, 
Oct. 22, to Mr. and Mrs. Alfred John 
Cool, Washington street. 
The many Manchester friends of 
Miss Opal Segtt, of Beverly, will 
regret to learn of her serious ill- 
ness. , 
The Manchester Boy Scouts have 
been invited by the boys of the pas- 
tor’s class of the Farms BYptist 
church to take a walk through the 
woods to Gravelly Pond, on Satur- 
day, Nov. 2, where they will have 
supper in the open air. 
Business Change. 
Kdward A. Lane, the painter, who 
has been in business in Manchester 
for the past thirty years or more, 
has sold the branch of his business 
devoted to carriage and automobile 
painting to William F. Roberts, who 
will continue the business at the 
same location, rear of 53 School st. 
Mr. Roberts assures the same prompt 
and efficient service that has typified 
Mr. Lane’s success in the last gener- 
ation or more, in this line. He has 
been with Mr. Lane for a number of 
vears, doing all the ornamental and 
novelty work, gilding, etc., not only 
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PAV Ay A 
NORTH SHOR BREEZE 
in the line of carriage and automo- 
bile painting, but on picture frames 
and such work. Mr. Roberts’ many 
friends extend their best wishes in 
his new venture and if his ability 
and good workmanship eount for 
anything his success is assured. 
Mr. Lane, meanwhile, is not re- 
tiring from the business. His paint- 
ing business has developed to such 
an extent as the years have advanc- 
ed that he becomes busier and busier 
each year. He will devote his entire 
attention to house painting, of which 
he gets a generous share all along 
the North Shore. He has done more 
business at the summer estates in 
the last thirty years than any other 
concern on the Shore. 
Busy at the Breeze Plant. 
Business at the Breeze printing 
plant, at Manchester, is better this 
fall than any year since the shop 
has been established. Aside from 
printing the Breeze, which in itself 
is considerable of a proposition for 
the ordinary shop, the Rockport 
Review, a weekly paper established 
31 years ago, and now owned by J. 
A. Lodge, is printed here; and the 
growing illustrated monthly maga- 
Everything Must Be Sold Before November Ist 
=== EVERYTHING MARKED AT (COS i= ee 
GRAND OPPORTUNITY TO BUY 
LIGHT GROCERIES AND SUNSHINE COOKIES 
AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES -------------------------=------- 
More Bargains This Week 
Canned Goods and Cookies sold fast last week at my reduced prices. 
thing must be sold by Nov. Ist. First purchasers this week get the best. 
s J. W. CAWTHORNE, Jr., Manchester 
TELEPHONE 79-6 
zine, The Resorter, is also being 
printed here now. ‘The contract for 
printing the theatre program of the 
Kmpire Theatre, Salem, a booklet of 
from 16 to 24 pages, 1000 copies for 
each performance, has also been 
awarded to The Breeze Print. The 
Beverly High School Aegis, a 28- 
page monthly, published by the stu- 
dents of the Beverly High school 
makes the fifth publication to be 
turned out regularly at this shop. 
The largest single job ever under- 
taken at the plant was awarded this 
week, in competition with many 
Boston shops, by the E. R. Grabow 
Co., the well known hotel corpora- 
tion, to print 100,000 6-page book- 
lets in two colors for advertising the 
two hotels of the corporation—the 
Myrtle Bank and the Titchfield, at 
Jamaica, British West Indies. 
The Breeze printing plant is one 
of the North Shore’s growing insti- 
tutions. The North Shore Breeze 
was started in May, 1904; the print- 
ing plant was established in August 
1906. The development of both en- 
terprises has been steady and con- 
sistent. The plant is one of three in 
Essex County working under union 
conditions—48 hours a week. 
Just bear in mind every- 
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