NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
3 
MANCHESTER 
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Kitfield will 
celebrate the 25th anniversary of their 
marriage on Friday evening, Nov. 29, 
and will be pleased to see their friends on 
that evening between the hours of 8 and 
10, at their home on Ashland avenue. 
Supt. Kimball has had the section of 
Beach street recently treated to a coating 
of oil, scraped the past week, and the 
oil-soaked dust and fine gravel removed. 
The road was oiled as an experiment to 
see what effect the oil would have on a 
road of tar-macadam construction, the 
object being, of course, to find something 
that would preserve the road and keep 
down the dust. While oil has been used 
with good effect on the road at the Cove, 
not thus constructed, it is not the thing to 
use on the sections in which the new con- 
struction has been introduced. While 
oiling has not been a success on the tar- 
macadam road it proves most conclusive- 
ly that the road itself is a success, for it 
is so built and is of such constituency 
that oil, much less water, can pen- 
trate it, —just the thing road builders all 
over the state are aiming for. 
Ernest Sackett, who recently received 
the appointment of chief electrician at 
the Charlestown Navy yard, has been 
transferred to the Brooklyn Navy yard, 
going there Monday of this week. 
Miss Elizabeth Harris of Lowell has 
peen spending the past week a guest of 
Mrs. J. A. Lodge, Church st. 
Notice is given in an another column 
to members of the Wednesday Evening 
club and all those desiring to become 
members, that tickets will be distributed 
at the Chapel next Monday evening, 
Nov. 25, from 7.30 to 9. The price 
of tickets this year will be $1.00, and 
they will be transferable. The commit- 
tee hopes this season to provide six enter- 
tainments of an especially good order, 
the quality of which, however, will be 
gauged by the number of members. 
The field of local talent drawn on in the 
past to furnish the entertainments is prac- 
tically exhausted and if the standard of 
entertainment is to be kept up outside 
talent must be sought. To do this the 
expense naturally increases and with a 
fee of $1.00 for the season the commit- 
tee feels certain of being able to provide 
high-class entertainments, of sufficient 
variety, to make the series of much in- 
terest. 
Among those who attended the Har- 
vard-Dartmouth game at Cambridge last 
Saturday and saw the New Hampshire 
boys do up the Harvard eleven 22-0, 
were the following: Misses Ruth and 
Alice Blaisdell, Miss Bessie Allen, Miss 
Abby Floyd, Miss Mary Rust, Chester 
Standley, Joseph Floyd, Bert Allen, 
Walter Fleming, Willard Rust, George 
Dean and George Norris. 
Personal Attention Given to all Work. 
44 Central St., 
Estimates cheerfully given. 
EDWARD S. BRADLEY 
PRACTICAL PLUMBER 
HOT WATER HEATING. 
GAS FIT TING 
Telephone Connection 
Manchester-by-the-Sea. 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
At the probate court in Salem, Mon- 
day, Chester L. Crafts was appointed 
administrator of the estate of Alice S., 
his late wife; bond, $2500. 
Miss Grace M. Mcgregor is back to 
her duties at Smith’s express after a few 
days’ visit with friends in Brookline. 
Rev. D. F. Lamson was in town the 
first of the week, a guest of A. F. Ben- 
nett, Ashland ave. 
John Cool left here Wednesday and 
Boston on Friday for a visit among rela- 
tives at his native home in Catalina, 
Nfld. He will be away most all winter, 
returning to Manchester in March. 
Mrs.’ Long’s classes in dancing will 
meet next week, the children on Tues- 
day afternoon from 4 to 6, and the adults 
on Wednesday, beginning at 8 o’clock. 
Deputy P. H. Boyle and suite will go 
to Gloucester Monday night to install 
the officers of Masconomo colony, Pil- 
grim Fathers. 
Joseph A. Bradley has concluded his 
work as caretaker atthe H. R. Squire 
estate for the winter months. 
BUY A ROLL OF 
PAROID 
Apply it to your roof, and then if you 
are not satisfied we will refund to 
you the full amount you have 
paid for the roofing, in- 
cluding the cost of 
applying it. 
SAMUEL KNIGHT & SONS 
36 Central St., Manchester 
We have on hand a complete line of 
THANKSGIVING SUPPLIES 
Nuts. Figs, Grapes, Dates, 
Cranberries, Vegetables, 
table raisins and some nice 
sweet cider. 
Gro. W. Hooper, 
MANCHESTER-BY2THE-2SEA 
FOR THE THANKSGIVING DINNER 
We have the usual supply of 
Best Turkeys, Chickens, Fowl, Ducks, Geese, Celery, 
Cranberries, Fruit, Grapes, etc. 
SUBLIE ISO MOMN PSRs WLS RIK a dP 
Central Street, 
PRIDE S CROSSING. 
MANCHEST ER-2BY2THE-SEA 
BEVERLY FARMS. 
MAGNOLIA. 
EEE EET RE AOE SEE ce OE, SRP 
Over Fifty Wears a Drug Store 
Business Founded in 1856 
Telephone No. 257 
It is our object to give every purchaser just what they ask for, and 
to make our prices right. 
We want every patron of our store to feel 
satisfied and to feel that they have got their money’s worth. 
Our specialty is our Prescription Departments. 
We carry a com- 
plete line of Fresh Drugs and Chemicals and only Registered 
Druggists and Graduates of Pharmacy are allowed to dispense Pre- 
scriptions. 
BENJ. L. ALDEN, — Registered Pharmacist 
Successor to A. LEE & SONS. 
Corner School and Union Sts., Manchester-by-the-Sea 
