Commonwealth of Massachusetts 
Essex, ss. Gloucester, April 1, 1914 
By virtue of an execution which 
issued upon a judgment rendered 
on the thirty-first day of March A. 
D. 1914, by Ida D. Lampron of Man- 
chester, County of Essex, against 
Abraham Lampron of said Manches- 
ter, in the Superior Court, at Salem, 
in said County, I have this day 
taken and will sell at public auc- 
tion on Saturday, the ninth day of 
May, A. D. 1914, at eleven o’clock 
in the forenoon, at the office of 
George E. Willmonton, Esq., cor- 
ner of School and Union Streets, in 
said Manchester, all the right, title 
and intenest which the said Abra- 
ham Lampron had, not exempt by 
law from attachment or levy on ex- 
ecution, on the thirteenth day of 
November, A. D. 1911, at thirty 
minutes past nine o’clock in the 
forenoon, being the time the same 
was attached on mesne process, in 
and to the following described par- 
cels of real estate, namely :— 
Two certain parcels of land situ- 
ate on the northerly side of Brook 
Street in Manchester in the County 
and Commonwealth aforesaid, with 
the buildings thereon. Lot No. 1 
is bounded and described as _ fol- 
lows :— 
Beginning at the southeast corner 
of the lot by the private way and 
land formerly of Mary J.~ Park- 
hurst and running thence northerly 
by land of said Parkhurst and land 
now or formerly of Daniel Sheehan 
one hundred and eighty-one (181) 
feet to land of Abigail Gentlee; 
thence running westerly by land of 
said Gentlee eighty (80) feet to a 
stake and land formerly of Web- 
ster F. Putnam (lot No. 6); thence 
running southerly and by said Put- 
nam’s land one hundred and seven- 
ty-three (173) feet to the Private 
Way; thence by said Private Way 
easterly seventy-five (75) feet to 
land of the said Parkhurst and the 
point of beginning. 
Being lot No. 5 on a plan of lots 
surveyed by W. H. Tappan, Esq. 
The above described land is con- 
veyed together with the privilege 
of passing and repassing over any 
part of the said Private Way to and 
from Brook St. on foot and with 
teams. 
Lot No. 2 is situated near the 
Eastern side of Putnam Court, so- 
ealled, in said Manchester, bound- 
ed and described as follows, to wit: 
Beginning at a stake at the south- 
western corner of the lot and by 
land formerly of said Putnam and 
running thence northerly by said 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
~ Sheriff’s Sale 
Co-operation 
Every person who reads the following paragraph 
and gives it a moment’s consideration will, I think, 
accept it as true: 
Our operators are desirous of giving good service and 
are anxious to avoid errors. Error calls simply make ad- 
ditional work for them; therefore, every instinct of self- 
interest suggests that they answer calls promptly and 
correctly, 
Mistakes occasionally will occur, some unquestion- 
ably resulting from operating errors, others from the 
calling of wrong numbers by subscribers. Not infre- 
quently some defect in the delicate equipment of the 
central office is found to be responsible for a fault 
which the subscriber attributes to the operator. 
It is our duty and our desire to strengthen these : 
weak points in our service, whether the weakness be 
human or mechanical, and we ean do it if subscribers 
do not wait until criticisms become complaints. 
May 1 suggest this form of co-operation: 
If there are slow answers, or if there is doubt of 
the accuracy of ‘‘wrong number,’’ ‘‘line busy,’’ or 
‘‘don’t answer’’ reports, I recommend that the chief 
operator be called at once. She is directly in charge 
of the operating room and responsible for its disei- 
pline. Therefore service criticisms should be discussed 
with her rather than with the regular operator whose 
obligation of service to other subscribers forbids the 
consideration of matters outside the Eoewen routine 
of handling calls made by number. 
If the trouble is persistent, I want to hear of it 
and I will be especially grateful to those whose ecrit- 
icisms give dates and facts upon which to base a def- 
inite inquiry. 
I. W. ROLFE, Manager. 
April 10, 1914. 
now stands, by land of Sheehan to 
Putnam’s land one hundred and 
seven (107) feet; thence turning 
and running easterly by said Put- 
nam’s land thirty-two (32) feet and 
ten (10) inches to the center of a 
ditch and land of Sheehan; thence 
southerly by the center of said 
ditch and land of Sheehan sixty-two 
(62) feet and six (6) inches to a 
stake, thence southerly by the cen- 
ter of said ditch and as the wall 
land of the grantor thirty-six (36) 
feet; thence westerly by grantor’s 
land sixty (60) feet to point of be- 
ginning. For title see B. 1400, P. 
453 and B. 1558, P. 381. 
It is understood that the Private 
Way named in this deed is now an 
accepted street of the Town of Man- 
chester, and is known as Brook 
Street. 
JOHN KARCHER, 
Apr.3,10,17 Deputy Sheriff. 
