16 
Crowhurst Cup Report. 
The official record of the first com- 
petition for the new Crowhurst cup, 
which was sailed off Manchester Au- 
gust 9, has just been made public, 
and will be of great interest to local 
yachtsmen. The race was sailed under 
the auspices of the Manchester Yacht 
club. The final report was delayed 
because many of the boats had to be 
re-measured according to rules. The 
official record shows that the Opitsah 
V., owned by S. H. and H. I. Foster, 
won, with the Warrior, S. C. Winson, 
second, which is the same order in 
which the boats finished in actual 
time. The cup is a handsome trophy 
of sterling silver, standing two feet 
high, and is said to be the most costly 
trophy ever sailed for along the Mas- 
sachusetts coast. It is of the Louis 
XV. period, from a special design. 
Francis M. Whitehouse, who has a 
magnificent estate at Manchester 
Cove, is the donor. 
The second contest for the cup will 
undoubtedly be sailed next August, 
which onght to be one of the big 
yachting events of the season on the 
North Shore. 
Douglas shoes at Bell’s Combina 
tion Stores 
» NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Body Washed Ashore, 
The headless body of a man was 
washed ashore by the heavy sea which 
was running last Saturday on the 
rocks near the T. Dennie Boardman 
estate, West Manchester. George M. 
Kebbe, electrical engineer for R. C. 
Hooper, discovered the body a little 
after 2 o’clock and notified Chief Pea- 
body, who, with Officer Jones, went 
to West Manchesterand after much 
difficulty dragged the body from the 
water. 
The body is thought to be that of 
William Darby of Lowell, who, with 
a companion, Alexander Matherson of 
Berlin, N.H., both employees of the 
United Shoe Machinery company at 
Beverly, were drowned off Beverly 
Farms September 18. 
When Medical Examiner Haddock 
was called from Beverly he declared 
the body had been in the water over a 
month, and this, coupled with the 
fact the clothes on the body found 
compared favorably with those of 
Darby would seem to indicate it was 
none other than that of the unfortunate 
man. Undertaker Gentlee took the 
body from the basement of the Man- 
chester town hall, where Chief Pea- 
body had brought it, to Beverly early 
Saturday evening. 
Besides being minus head, both 
hands were also gone, and the body 
was somewhat eaten. It was clad in 
blue serge trousers and vest, overalls, 
patent leather shoes and striped out- 
ing shirt. The coat was missing. 
Carlos — Johnson. 
Henry Carlos and Miss Anna John- 
son, both of Manchester, were united 
in marriage at the Baptist parsonage, 
Manchester, last Wednesday night. 
Rev. Clarence Strong Pond of Beverly 
Farms, assisted by Rev. E. H. Brews- 
ter, officiated. Mr. Carlos is employed 
as caretaker at the S. P. Blake estate, 
West Manchester, and Miss Johnson 
was formerly with Mrs. J. L. Bremer, 
Smith’s Point. 
will live in the gardener’s house now 
being constructed on the Blake estate. 
Annual Meeting. 
The Ministering Circle of King’s 
Daughters of Manchester held their 
annual meeting Monday evening at 
the home of Mrs. Julius F. Rabardy 
and elected these officers: Mrs. Abbie 
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos . 
Bullock, leader; Mrs. Otis M. Stan- - 
ley, vice-leader; Miss Sarah Giles, 
secretary ; and Mrs. Arthur Bullock, 
treasurer. 
AUTOMOBILES. . 
REPAIRING. 
SUPPLIES. 
STORAGE. 
UPTON, MAC ELLN Fie CG. 
Works opposite Boston & Maine Depot, 
TELEPHONE DAY OR NIGHT. 
River Street, 
BEVERLY. 
Wall Papers. 
NEW STOCK 
seer ineee 
SA sed a) el eee Ge 
F, O. SANBORN & CO. 
(Successors to E. A. Mackintire) 
Stationery, Toys and Wall Paper, 
SALEM. 
98 
Essex STREET. 
WOODBURY ELECTRIC Co. 
HLECTRICAL CONTRACTORS. 
HOUSE WIRING, TELEPHONES, BELLS, Etc. 
High Tension Underground Work a Specialty. 
Opera House Building, 3 Hale Street, BEVERLY. 
TEL. 918. 
OLIVER T. ROBERTS. 
WILLIAM HOARE. 
ROBERTS & HOARE, 
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. 
Contract Work a specialty. 
Particular attention paid to Jobbing. 
TELEPHONE CONNECTION. 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA. 
INNIS CORNER e2:ii22N Dry Goods and Novelties. 
Sate 
