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4 
MANCHESTER. 
Miss Catherine Roach of Boston 
_,spent the holiday with Miss Mary 
Rust at her home on School street. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Crombie left 
for Belchertown Wednesday to make 
a visit to their daughter, Mrs. Henry 
Witt. 
The selectmen have issued a permit 
to Louis M. L. Clarke to store gaso- 
_ line and autos in his garage on Sum- 
‘mer street. 
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Richardson 
and daughter of Salem were the guests 
of Mrs. Isaac Richardson on Ashland 
avenue ‘Thangsgiving. 
Tonight at the Seaside bowling 
alley the Beverly team that defeated 
the locals last Friday night at Beverly 
will play another match. 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Andrews 
left Saturday for Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, 
to spend the winter with their daugh- 
ter, Mrs. E. J. Richards, and family. 
Sorosis shoes in Fall styles at Boe 
Central square store. 
The second meeting of the co 
Aid to the Injured class was held 
‘Monday evening. The members were 
given instruction in practical work. 
There were several new members 
present. A written examination will 
be given at the next meeting. 
Emerson and Douglas shoes in Win- 
ter weights and styles at Bell’s Cen- 
tral square store. 
The change made in Bell’s Beach 
street store renders the store much 
more adapted to the business. The 
small ell formerly used as a room for 
ladies shoes has been extended back, 
and this will be occupied by Karnesy 
of Magnolia as a fruit stand. 
Miss Gertrude Ryan returned home 
from Chicago Saturday evening after 
two month’s training in the Children’s 
Memorial Hospital there. Miss Ryan 
is spending a few weeks with her 
friend, Miss Beatrice Long, after 
_ which she plans to take up hospital 
training in the East. 
Lamson and Hubbard hats for Fall 
and winter at Bell’s Beach street 
store. * 
The joke is going the rounds about 
a party of men who were treated to a 
supper at the home of one of the men 
Thanksgiving eve, at which a 
“racoon” was supposed to be the fea- 
ture viand in a stew. The concoction 
‘was very tasty and everything went 
along nicely until next day when it 
was learned that it was a skunk and 
not a racoon that the party had been 
treated to. It tasted good, anyway. 
_ ‘The first snow of the season came 
on Thanksgiving Day. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
The many friends of William Rob- 
erts are greatly pleased over his recov- 
ery from the operation which he re- 
cently underwent. 
Mrs. E. R. Christopher of Boston 
spoke to a large audience at the Bap- 
tist church last Friday night on ‘“Mis- 
sion Work in Alaska.” 
The next party of the winter series 
will be held in the Town hall next Fri- 
day evening, Dec. 6, and promises to 
be as popular as those préceding it. 
The sharpness of the atmosphere 
this morning and the icy sidewalks 
impressed one with the fact that it is 
winter and that the delightful wea- 
ther we have been having this fall is 
about at an end. 
News has been received of the ser- 
ious: illness of Hamilton R. Squier, 
of Washington Heights, New York 
City, who was operated upon Tuesday 
for trobule of a serious nature. Mr. 
Squier formerly owned the estate 
where Ralph H. Barbour now lives, 
off Pine street, Manchester. 
Dr. Merritt A. Long of Lowell 
came to town Wednesday to spend 
Thanksgiving with his brother T. W. 
Long and family. We _ note 
Lowell papers that at a recent meet- 
ing of the Lowell General Hospital 
nurses alumni association the address 
of the day was a very interesting and 
instructive lecture, illustrated with 
drawings, on “The Mosquito and its 
Relation to Malaria,” by Dr. Long. 
9000000000000 0000 00000000000 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOO 
E8TABLISHED 1845 
SHELDON’S MARKET 
H. F. HOOPER, Manager 
Dealer in First-Class 
PROVISIONS, POULTRY, GAME, VEGETABLES, Etc 
CENTRAL STREET, MANCHESTER 
Beverly Farms 
Pride’s Crossing 
0900000000000 00000000000000K $O00000000000000000000000000 
Page and Shaw’s Candies 
Whitman’s Chocolates iv, 
Eastman Kodak Company’s Goods oa 
in the> 
SOLE AGENT in MANCHESTER for 
Huyler’s Chocolates and Bon Bons 
Bell Mead Sweets 
17 
Progress. 
The Husband—Do you think, my 
dear, that all this so-called culture, 
these fads, these lectures and ethical 
and philosophical movements of yours 
really do you any good? 
The Wife—Incalculable good! Why 
every day I live I appreciate more 
and more fully what an insignificant 
creature man is! 
Samuel Knight Sons’ Co. 
Coal and Wood 
32 Central St. 
Manchester 
200000000 OOOO 000000 OO 00 00000 
Geo. W. Hooper 
Dealer in First-Class 
| 
_ GROCERIES 
Kitchen Furnishings 
$ MANCHESTER, - MASS. 
9900000000000000000000000000 
TELEPHONE 67 
Magnolia 
Bell’s Forkdipt Chocolates 
> 
e 
BENJ. L. ALLEN, Registered Pharmacist 
Corner School and Union Streets, Manchester, Mass. 
| oe ee 
TWO ’PHONES; 
NOS. 257 and 8388—IF ONE IS BUSY CALL THE OTHER 
CRETE CED QUE GEE EDO 8  6000000000000000 00 
