42 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Telephone 190 
Bullock Brothers, 
Veuve Chaffard Olive Oil, 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SBA. 
Swansdown Flour, 
AGENT: FOR HILLCREST WATER CO. 
S. S. Pierce Co.’s Fancy Groceries —————_ 
Postoffice Block j 
Fine Groceries 
Brigham Creamery Butter 
OA OOM LOOP RAO O OSL POLO LE LONEL ALLELE apni, i 
Telephone 160 
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. 
Postoffice Block, - - = = 
Manchester-by-the-Sea 
A. J. ORR 
PAINTING AND 
PAPER-HANGING 
Dealer in PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, PUTTY, ETC. 
A full line of PATTON’S SUNPROOF PAINT and Specialties. 
Bennett Street _—__z,;,,.cphone_- 
Manchester, Mass. 
L. RADLO, TAILOR 
Begs to announce to North Shore residents that he has opened his 
Tailoring Establishment for the season of 1911 in the 
ALLEN BUILDING, Summer St., Manchester 
opposite the Electric Light Station 
Everything in the line of Tailoring for Ladies or Gentlemen 
TELEPHONE 130 
OLYMPIA FRUIT STORE 
(N. G. KASSANOS, Prop.) 
26 Central St., - 
= Manchester-by-the-Sea 
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in 
Choice Foreign and Domestic Fruits, Nuts and Confectionery. 
Cigars and Soft Drinks. 
JOSEPH LEVIN, Custom Tailor 
Has a large and complete assortnient of up-to-date patterns 
for which to select goods for 
THAT NEW SUIT 
He also solicits from the residents of all parts of the North Shore anything they 
may desire in the Tailoring line 
Cleansing, Dyeing, Repairing and Pressing 
Special Feature—Nice Line Men's Furnishings. They will please my Customers. 
Beach Street 
Telephone Cona. 
MANCHESTER 
Letters remaining unclaimed at 
the Manchester, Mass. postoffice for 
week ending May 20, 1911: Allen, 
A. Kingsley; Boston, O. J.; Bow- 
ker Insecticide Co.; Coburn, E. R. ; 
Campbell, Emma H.; Deslauries, O. 
N. Rev.; Densmore, Edward D. 
Mrs.; Dinsmore, E. W. Mrs.; Edgar, 
Samuel; Hurd, Charles Mrs.; Lane, 
Michael; Lepage, Alfred; Norton, 
Daniel Dr.; O’Keef, B. Miss; Pat- 
rick, Paul; Rielly, James, 
MANCHESTER. 
Miss Margaret McNeary spent the 
week-end in Dorchester the guest of 
her cousin, Miss Margaret Lyons. 
Fraser Andrews has 
position as bookkeeper with the 
Loose Wiles Biseuit Co., of Boston. 
Miss Anna Maslin of Derry, N. H., 
is visiting in town. Mr. Maslin and 
family expect to move back to Man- 
chester early in June. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pinette were 
in town over Sunday visiting the 
former’s mother, Mrs. A. Lampson, 
Brook street. E. 
Former Resident Dead. 
KHphraim D. Jones died at his 
home in Salem Monday afternoon of 
consumption. .He passed part of 
the winter on the Isle of Pines, off 
Cuba, but the climate did not help 
him and he came home. 
He was born in Belfast, Me., in 
. 1854, and first’ came to Manchester. 
About twenty-five years ago he went 
to Salem. He was in the insurance 
business and for many years was 
secretary of the Salem board of 
underwriters. Since 1894 he had 
been a director of the Merchants 
National Bank. 
' He was an original member of the 
Barton-square Dramatie Club, a 
member of the board of trade and of 
the Second Unitarian church. He 
leaves a wife and several children. 
Death of Mrs. Chamberlin. 
Mrs. Galon Chamberlin, whose 
home was on the town line here, 
died May 11th of old age. The 
funeral took place at the late home 
of the deceased Saturday, conducted 
by Rev. G. F. Pixley of the Baptist 
church. The bufial was at Rich- 
mond cemetery. The pall bearers 
were B. H. Burgess, Richard Heath, 
Andrew Lauer, John Parker, Sam- 
uel Jackson and William Van 
Brocklin. 
Mrs. Chamberlin was born. July 
24th, 1824, in Manchester, Mass. 
She was married in 1850 to Galon 
Chamberlin. Her home has been in 
Macomb county since she was seven 
years of age and for the past twenty- 
three years in Richmond. Her hus- 
band passed away six years ago. 
She is survived by two children, B. 
S. Chamberlin and Mrs. Voakes, 
both of this place, and two grand- 
children, Mrs, J. C. Snider and Roy 
K. Chamberlin now of Detroit, also 
one great-grandchild, Mildred Sni- 
der. She was aged eighty-six years, 
ten months and eighteen days at the 
time of death—F rom tlie ‘‘Review’’ 
of Richmond, Mich., May 19. 
secured a: 
Sepa 
