NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
THESE ARE 
OPENING DAYS IN AUTUMN 
MILLINERY 
THE NEW SUITS, WAISTS 
AND SKIRTS 
ARE NOW ON DISPLAY 
Tine New in Bed Coverings 
Maish 
LAMINATED 
Cotton-Down 
Comforts 
Have revolutionized Bed Covering 
Maish Comforts are luxuriously warm and wonderfully light 
The Snow-White filling of the “Maish” is made by a special 
process into one continuous supple, light, 
Maish Comforts do away with unhealthful, heavy covers. 
We have all sizes. 
downy 
layer. 
Ask to see them when visiting our store. 
P. S. Commencing October 2, Miss Marjorie Graves will be with us every Wednesday, to 
give free instruction in Art Embroidery. 
Plan to join the classes now forming. 
MANCHESTER 
Miss Susie Gould of Boston was a 
guest over Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. 
Geo. F. Allen. 
At the probate court in Salem Monday 
an inventory was filed of the estate of 
the late Annie H. Dame, $2250. 
A delegation from Fr. Shahan court, 
M. C. O. F., paid a visit to Abraham 
Lincoln and St. Anne’s courts in Glou- 
cester, Tuesday evening, when a most 
pleasant evening was enjoyed. The trip 
was made by barge. 
Selectman and Mrs. F. K. Swett left 
Wednesday for a short vacation tour of 
a week or more to St. John, N. B., and 
vicinity. 
Miss Barbara E. Smith concludes her 
services as compositor at the Breeze 
office tonight. 
Mr. and Mrs. Hollis L. Roberts, Mrs. 
Roberts’ brother Harry Swett, and Miss 
Emma Hotz left Monday on a vacation 
trip by boat to St. John, N. B, and 
vicinity, to be gone eight or nine days. 
A very interesting meeting of Liberty 
Rebekah lodge was held last Friday even- 
ing, when Dist. Dep. G. M. Mrs. 
Florence Lunt, accompanied by her suite 
of grand officers, paid an official visit. 
Misses Mary ©O’Rourke and Mary 
Sheehan have returned to their homes in 
East Boston. 
N.S.H.S. Notes. 
The bi-monthly meeting of the North 
Shore Horti. society last Friday evening 
was of a very interesting character, an 
unusually large number of the members 
being out. Dahlias was the subject of the 
meeting and Maurice Fuld, secretary of 
the N. E. Dahlia society was the prin- 
cipal speaker. Mr. Fuld gave a very in- 
teresting and instructive talk on the classes 
and culture of this plant. He had a large 
collection of flowers to explain his talk. 
Herman Thiemann, formerly of Man- 
chester, was on from Belchertown to at- 
tend the meeting, and he, too, gave a 
very instructive talk on this subject. 
His remarks were interspersed with 
wit and humor which kept the audience 
ROBERT A. 
in a continual state of laughter.A vote o 
thanks was extented Mr. Fuld and Mr. 
Thiemann for their talks. At the close 
of the meeting a collation was served. 
It is the intention of the active workers 
in the society to have lively meetings the 
coming fall and winter and meetings 
that will prove instructive to the members 
and of general interest to all interested in 
horticulture. 
At the meeting last week Pres. Mc- 
gregor had on exhibition two tables of 
single seedling and anemone flowered 
dahlias of his own raising. 
The next meeting of the society will 
be Oct. 4. 
Douglas Shoes at Bell’s * 
MITCHELL, 
CONTRACTOR-GARDENER 
We will contract or do by day work operations which come under the fol- 
lowing heads: 
Landscape Gardening, Forestry, Entomology, and the General Care of Es- 
tates, viz: 
Planting (we will execute the plans ot landscape gardeners and _ architects) 
grading, lawns, paths, drives, trimming and thinning of wood-land and shade trees, 
spraying, moth work, hedges and formal shaped trees and shrubs, pruning of fruit 
trees. 
Cor. School and Pleasant Sts., 
Lock Box 35. 
Manchester-by-the-Sea. 
Telephone Connection. 
