2 
NOR THeSHORESBREEZE 
keeping the audience in one continual 
roar of laughter. The orchestra, which 
played some good | selections, was 
made up of Red Men, with T. W. 
Long of Conomo tribe as director. 
_ After the concert the brothers ad- 
journed to the wigwam, and the 
remainder of the evening was spent 
in speech-making, singing and story- 
telling. 
_ .The committee of Conomo tribe 
having the affair in charge was made 
up of Robert Allen (chairman), James 
Salter, Allen S. Peabody, William 
Mitchell, Milton Knight, Harry S. 
Tappan, F. G. Cheever and L. W. 
Floyd. 
FINEST IMPORTED 
Turkish and Oriental 
Pine tnd. Gigarellé TOBACGHS. 
FRANK G. CHEEVER CO. 
Prescription Pharmacists, 
CENTRAL SQUARE, 
MANCHESTER-BY=THE-SEA, 
Tel. 130. MASS. 
GEO. W. HOOPER, 
DEALER IN 
First-Class Groceries, 
KITCHEN FURNISHINGS. 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, 
George S. Sinnicks, 
MASON BUILDER 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA. 
THE PHELPS STUDIO 
120 MAIN ST., GLOUCESTER. 
Portraits, Views, Amateur Work. 
Telephones 53-5 
225-4 
EDWARD S. KNIGHT, 
FLORIST, 
Dealer im Fine Plants, Bulbs and Seeds. 
FLOWERS for all occasions. 
44 School St., Manchester-by-the-Sea. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM WEDDING. 
Manchester Couple married amid a Bower 
of Beautiful Flowers. 
*Mid a bower of white, pink and yel- 
low chrysanthemums and_ standing 
under a wedding bell of white chrys- 
anthemums Miss Maude M. J. Clark, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. 
Clark of Beverly Farms and Leonardo 
W. Carter, son of Mr. and Mrs. John 
W. Carter of Manchester were united 
in marriage Wednesday evening. The 
ceremony, which was very simple, 
was performed by Rev. Walter Herod 
Ashley. 
The wedding and the reception 
which followed was one of the pret- 
tiest affairs at Manchester this fall. 
Both took place at the house on 
School street which will be occupied 
by the young couple on their return 
from a honeymoon of one month in 
the South. 
At the marriage ceremony, which 
occurred at 7 o’clock, only the im- 
mediate relatives were present, but 
more than 100 invitations were sent 
out for the reception which followed 
at 7.30 o’clock. 
The bride was handsomely gowned 
in white organdie, and she wore a 
veil. She carried a shower bouquet of 
bride’s roses. Her sister, Miss Alice 
G. Clark, who wore a gown of white 
muslin and carried a bouquet of pinks, 
was the maid of honor. The best 
man was William W. Hoare. 
At the reception Misses Agnes 
Carter, Amy B. Haskell, Edna and 
Marion Kitfield, Grace MacGregor 
and Alice Clark served ice cream and 
cake, and Miss Eleanor Morgan serv- 
ed punch. The ushers were Messrs. 
Richard Cheever and Albert Cunning- 
ham. 
Among the large number present 
were friends and relatives from Bos- 
ton, New York, Gloucester, Marlboro, 
Cambridge, Malden, Dorchester, and 
Beverly. 
The bride and groom are both well 
and popularly known on the North 
Shore. The former was a graduate 
from the Manchester High School in 
1903, and Mr. Carter is the agent at 
the West Manchester station. Both 
have always been prominent in the 
social affairs of the town. 
Mr. and Mrs. Carter started on the 
the 9.35 train from West Manchester 
Wednesday night for Boston, from 
where they went to New York and 
Washington and to North Carolina, 
where they will spend three weeks 
with Mr. Carter’s uncle, H. P. Has- 
kell, at Asheville. 
A large number of friends gathered 
at the Manchester station to give 
the couple a big send off, but when 
they found they were misled, they 
boarded the train and surprised the 
young people when they boarded the 
train at West Manchester. About 
twenty-five of the party went as far 
as Beverly, returning to Manchester 
on the 10.20 train. 
Flying Fisherman. 
The private subscription train which 
runs up the Gloucester branch to 
Boston about 8.30 mornings and _ re- 
turns about 4.30 in the afternoon, was 
discontinued for the season with last 
Monday morning’s trip. 
Heavy Wind Swept Coast. 
The driving northeast storm which 
swept the coast Sunday and Monday 
did much damage to shade trees all 
along the North Shore, and wires 
were blown down in several places. 
No serious damage, however, resulted. 
At Manchester many large trees 
suffered from the strong wind, limbs 
being broken and smaller trees up- 
rooted in several cases. At Beverly 
the fury of the gale was sufficient to 
lift the roof off a steam-roller shed, 
and to blow the old mill at Ryal Side 
into the river. 
Mite Box Opening. 
The Women’s Foreign Missionary 
circle of the Baptist church, Man- 
chester, held a mite box opening in 
the vestry of the church last Friday 
afternoon. At 5 o’clock a missionary 
tea was served at which the Father 
Lights, the pastor and officers of the 
church were invited guests. This 
was followed in the evening by a mis- 
sionary meeting at which the subject 
of the Philippines was taken up. Ex- 
tracts of letters from Rev. Mr. Briggs 
a former pastor, who is nowa missiom- 
ary in Japan, were read. 
Unclaimed Letters, 
Manchester. 
Letters remaining unclaimed at Mamches- 
ter, Mass., Post Office for week ending 
Nov. 12: J. F. Brown, L. A. Bailey, Miss 
Gertrude Bement, Mrs. Thomas, Burgess, 
Mrs. Alfra Brown, Miss Bertha Brown, John 
J. Coughlin, Rev. Matthew Criernon, Mrs, 
S. P. Collins, M. Craft, Frank Dubuis, Pres- 
ton Gibson, Elmer D. Goodwin, Orin Hoop- 
er & Sons, Miss Knight, Miss Susan Latman, 
Miss Mary McCormack, James Murphy, M, 
Murphy, Miss M. Annie Perry, M. Percival, 
H. A. Patterson, W. K. Odige, E. L. Ray- 
mond, Mrs. N. W. Sargent, Pearl Smith, 
John T. Thorne, Sid Ferrir, Connell & Lee- 
han, Rosalind Wheeler, G. O. Winslow. 
SAMUEL L. WHEATON, P.M. 
— 
——_—+ 
J. E. WHITNEY, 
Mfg. Sewing Machines, 
Special Mfg. Attachments. 
Factory Outfitter. 72 BEDFORD ST, 
Phone 65 Oxford. BOSTON. 
