NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
29 
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3 € 
2 € 
3 x Manchester X ¢£ 
BI ne MANU ARIMA IE 
Raymond MacGuire of Springfield 
is visiting his uncle, A. E. Gibson, 21 
Vine street. 
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Knoerr mo- 
tored to Narragansett Pier last Sun- 
day in their Overland car. 
Mrs. Annie Silva of Summer street 
is in Boston visiting Mrs. William 
‘Kelley, her daughter, on Massachu- 
-setts avenue. 
Lagory Wade of this town started 
-Monday on a season’s engagement as 
a member of the orchestra in one of 
Lynn’s largest theatres. 
C. A. Lodge, jr., left yesterday for 
Amherst where he will resume his 
studies within a few weeks at the 
State College. He is a senior this 
year. 
_ George S. Silva has just hai his 
attractive bungalow off Summer 
street wired for electric lights. G. 
A. Knoerr had the contract for wir- 
ing and fixtures. 
The 15th annual ball of the Essex 
County club employees, always the 
largest attended dancing party of 
the season, and in many respects the 
most important of the score or more 
parties held in the Manchester Town 
hall in the course of the summer, will 
be held next Thursday evening, 
Sept. 8. Stiles orchestra of Lynn 
will give a concert between 8.30 and 
9.30 and dancing will continue until 
2 a.m. 
A motor boat came to grief on the 
rocks off Mrs. George D. Howe’s es- 
tate, on Smith’s Point, during Tues- 
day night and Wednesday morning. 
A party of nine men were returning 
from Gloucester, and were bound 
either for Salem or Marblehead, 
when the engine in the boat, which 
was about thirty feet long, ‘‘went 
bad.’’ They drifted about and 
were finally blown and washed al- 
most on to the rocks at Smith’s 
Point. One of the party finally 
jumped overboard with rope and 
swam to the rocks. The boat was 
pulled in and the rest of the party 
landed as best they could. The an- 
chor was thrown overboard and the 
- boat was pushed. off after all had 
- landed. 
The men walked to the 
* station and caught the 9.06 train 
z 
bd 
for Salem, some of them hatless, 
* without coats, and all of them wet 
- outside as well as inside. 
Nobody 
» seems to know who they were, other 
: 
' Salem, 
than that they bought tickets for 
The boat was a total loss, 
gerne ane 
Telephone 13 
Veuve Chaffard Olive Oil, 
Telephone 160 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, 
Swansdown Flour, 
Postoffice Block 
Bullock Brothers, Fine Groceries 
Brigham Creamery Butter 
S. S. Pierce Co.’s Fancy Groceries 
Free Delivery 
Manchester Fruit Store 
P. VOTTEROS PROP, (Successor to M. G. Revelas) 
Choice Foreign and Domestic Fruit 
ALL FRUITS IN THEIR SEASON 
MANCHESTER, MAGNOLIA, BEVERLY FARMS, PRIDE’S CROSSING. 
Postofiice Block, 
Manchester-by-the-Se a 
Joseph Bradley is the new ap- 
prentice at the Breeze office. 
Mrs. W. W. Winchester, School 
street, is away for a week’s visit in 
Boston and vicinity. 
Mrs. Frank L. Decker and daugh- 
ter, Ruth, leave tomorrow for a ten 
days’ vacation trip to Woolwich, 
Me. 
Hugh Burke, yardsman at Sam’l. 
Knight & Sons’, is enjoying a vaca- 
tion and is spending part of it with 
relatives in the Provinces. 
Guy Leman of Medford, who has 
been visiting his grandparents, Mr. 
and Mrs. Hoffman, had the misfor- 
tune to break his wrist Monday. 
The Essex County association, W. 
R. C., are to hold their September 
meeting at Manchester next Wed- 
nesday. It will be in the form of an 
outing at Tuck’s Point. 
Edward B. Kitfield returned last 
Sunday from New York city. He 
went to Atlantic this week for the 
airship races and was to have made 
a flight in Walter Wellman’s air- 
ship. 
Alexander Robertson leaves to- 
morrow for Woolwich, Me., where 
Mrs. Robertson and son have been 
spending a six weeks’ vacation at 
their summer cottage on the Kenne- 
bee. They will return to Manches- 
ter the early part of next week. 
Edward Killam of Manchester, a 
member of the Mass. Automobile 
Operators’ association, will hold a 
dance in Town -hall, Sept. 5, the 
proceeds to go to the above named 
association. Long’s orchestra will 
furnish the music. 
BEWARE 
OF THE DANGEROUS 
House Fly 
Flies are. disease carriers. 
Infect food and drink. 
Each female lays 150 eggs. 
KEEP THEM OUT OF ALL 
YOUR BUILDINGS. 
Do your duty to your home and 
family by ridding the house of the 
pest of mankind—the house-fly— 
one of the worst breeders of disease 
that makes miserable the life of the 
average household. 
“Fiy-Go” 
For sale by 
F. W. VARNEY 
Beverly Farms 
BERGQUIST & DeLESDERNIER, Tailors 
Mr. Fred Bergquist, formerly in the Tailoring business in Manchester (next to 
the Breeze office), wishes to announce to his friends and patrons that, in part- 
nership with G. Arthur DeLesdernier, he has opened a first-class Tailoring Es- 
tablishment at 3 Tremont Row, Room 17B, Boston, where he will be pleased to 
see them and attend to their sartorial needs. 
3 TREVONT ROW, Opp. HANOVER ST., Room 17B, BOSTON 
All Kinds of Suits and Overcoats Made to Order. 
Latest Styles, Ali Work Guaranteed 
Cleaning, Dyeing, Pressing, Repairing and Remodelling, at Moderate Prices 
