22 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
pes Drea Hose aL | 
) Real Estate :: : } 
Boos : And Improvements 
DEA VASO VASO DADA 
The new summer home of Robert 
L. Raymond now under erection at 
his newly acquired property on 
Beach street, Manchester, will be an 
attractive, commodious cottage of 
old English architecture with plas- 
tered exterior. 
living room, dining room, loggia, 
family apartments with all modern 
improvements, servants’ apartments 
and culinary departments, all con- 
veniently equipped and arranged. 
There will be a terrace extending 
from the loggia and the rear grounds 
will be nicely graded. The location 
of the house is a very picturesque 
one being on a high elevation amid 
woodlands which command beauti- 
ful vistas of the ocean and surround- 
ing country. The contract calls for 
its completion next spring. The 
architect of the house was James 
Purdon of Boston. The contractor in 
charge of the building is R. D. Don- 
aldson of Lincoln. 
Gordon Dexter is having a por- 
tion of his estate at Beverly Farms 
enclosed with a granite wall with 
pillars. Linehan has the contract. 
Storrow cottage’ No 1 at the 
Farms, which has been occupied by 
the Phillip Dexter family, is having 
a new second-story piazza added, 
wire screened. New French win- 
dows are to be added to the cottage 
also. Publicover Bros. have the 
contract. 
Work has been started on improy- 
ing the Shore road, Magnolia, the 
appropriation of $2,000 from the 
‘Gloucester city government calling 
for a sixteen-foot road and a three. 
foot sidewalk on the water front 
This will be a great and much ap- 
preciated improvement for this sec- 
tion of Magnolia. 
GREATEST MECHANICS FAIR. 
Delighted Crowds Enjoying the 
Wonderful Exhibits and Enter- 
tainments in Mechanics 
Building, Boston. 
The end of the second week of the 
Mechanics Exposition in Mechanics 
Buildings, Boston, finds it the great- 
est Mechanics Fair ever held in New 
England. For the final two weeks, 
beginning Monday, the 17th, comes 
the celebrated band of the 75th 
Canadian regiment of Lunenburg, 
The plans call for a 
FOOTBALL NOTES, 
The game between the Manchester 
High and the Beverly Farms High 
last Wednesday resulted in another 
defeat for the Manchester boys, the 
score being 5 to 0. It was a good 
game and one that shows that our 
boys are improving, and with a little 
more practice will later on in the sea- 
son reverse the decisions. Good field 
. work was shown throughout the 
game and the coaching was excellent. 
The.attendance was good despite the 
attractions elsewhere, which took a 
large number away. who would un- 
doubtedly have been present to en- 
courage the boys in their efforts. The 
boys deserve credit for the spirit and 
the vim which they put into every 
play and also for the manly way 
they acknowledged their defeat. 
They have an excellent coach in Mr. 
Heywood, the assistant principal. 
The Peabody team defeated the 
Manchester boys at football, at the 
Brook street playground last Satur- 
day afternoon, the score being 64-0. 
The out-of-town team was composed 
of much larger boys than the local 
team, and those who witnessed the 
game think the Manchester boys de- 
serve praise for doing as well as 
they did. 
Next Wednesday the boys will 
play Marblehead and let every one 
who can be present to encourage 
them. 
Saturday, Oct. 29, Manchester 
boys will go to Beverly Farms, and 
quite a number of Manchester peo- 
ple have signified their intention to 
accompany them. 
Nova Scotia, considered the crack 
military band of the maritime prov- 
inces. A model printing plant shows 
every detail of how a daily newspa- 
per is gotten out. Paintings and 
statuary valued at $1,000,000 are on 
exhibition in the art gallery and in 
Paul Revere Hall adjoining lectures 
on domestic science are given by 
Bertha Palmer Haffner of Chicago 
and colored motion pictures with 
talks on the cultivation and market- 
ing of coffee and tea supply an excel- 
lent and instructive entertainment 
given by Charles E. Greeley. 
Saturdays, up to 6 o’clock, chil- 
dren under 12 years of age, are ad- 
mitted for ten cents. All of the at- 
tractions are free. The exposition 
will’ positively close Saturday, Oct. 
29. 
One forward look is worth forty 
backward glances, 
ECE CEE ECEEEE: 323323323322, 
W Amntt of the Wi 
4 the * Churches North Shore 
Orthodox Cong’l Church. — 
Rev. L. Il. Ruge, Pastor. 
Sunday morning worship at 10.45, 
Sunday school, 12 m. Evening wor. 
ship, 7.00. Prayer meeting. Tueg-| 
day, 7.30 p. m. a 
Baptist Church. 
Rev. Theodore L. Frost, Minister, | 
Sunday morning worship at 1045 
Bible school, 12 m. B. Y. P. U,.) 
6.00, in the vestry. Evening we 
ship, 7.00. Prayer meetings Tues 
day and Friday evenings, 7.30. — 
Sacred Heart Church 
Rev. Mark J. Sullivan, Pastor. 
Sunday Masses: 7, 8.30 and 10.30 
a.m. Last Mass followed by Bene- 
diction of the Blessed Sacrament. 
Week-day Mass at the church at 7. 
a.m. 
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Rev. Theodore L. Frost will 
preach at the Baptist church Sunday 
morning on ‘‘The  Preincarnat 
Christ.’’ In the evening at 7.30 
subject will be one of a new series 
evening sermons entitled ‘‘Chris- 
tianity’s Challenge.’’ —— 
Important business meeting at th 
Baptist parsonage Monday evening. 
Wednesday evening, 7.30, Yarn so- 
cial. Silver collection at the door. 
Come and enjoy real sociability. _ 
o 
Rally at the Congregational Church, 
Sunday, Oct. 16. 
Rally at the morning service: The 
sunply committee at the great Con- 
gregational Centennial, Boston, will 
supply the pulpit with a speaker. ~ 
Rally at the Sunday school at 1 
m. Dr, Miner, Dean of Wisconsi 
Congregationalism and others will 
address the children. Special musie. 
Program. 1 
Rally at the evening service, 7 p 
m., the Rev. H. A. Miner, D.D., Madi- 
son, Wisconsin, will preach. > 
Let all members and friends of the 
church rally on this day at all the 
services. Let nothing interfere with 
the loyalty of a single individual. 
+ 
Parent-Teacher Association. a. 
The first meeting of the Parent- 
Teacher association will be held at. 
the Price school, Wednesday even- 
ing, Oct. 19, at 7.45 o’elock. The 
entertainment committee has pre- 
pared a special musical program for 
the evening. This will be followed 
by a social hour, during which pa- 
rents will have an opportunity to 
meet the teachers. All are cordially 
invited to attend, _ 
