NORTH 
w He On Rak 
B Re he Ee 7 19 
LASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT 
Advertisements under this head at 1 cent per word the first week. One-half cent 
per word after the fi-st week. -3- 
STAMPS may be mailed in payment. 
LOST—A black bracelet, Sunday, Sep- 
tember 10th, between So. Boston and 
Manchester. Apply Breeze office. 39 
YOUNG LADY, college graduate, would 
like a situation as companion or gov- 
erness. Can also do _ clerical work. 
Apply Mrs. Amory Eliot, Sea street, 
Manchester. 2t 
FOR SALE—Thoroughbred Yorkshire ter- 
rier, 1 year old. Thoroughly house 
broken and very handsome. Must he 
sold as owner has no place to keep him. 
Apply Breeze Office. 39 
A GOOD DRIVING HORSE to rent for 
the summer to the right party; black 
cob, good roadster, afraid of nothing; 
kind and gentle, fine appearing. Would 
let with or without rig or with or with- 
out driver. Address ‘‘Horse,’’ the 
Breeze Office. 
TENEMENT 4 or 5 rooms to let, fur- 
nished or unfurnished for the summer, 
or year round, with improvements, at 
Manchester Cove. Apply to Miss Wil- 
son, 325 Summer St., Manchester, 
or Mr. Lodge at the Breeze Office. tf 
BOSTON TERRIERS for sale. Sired by 
the famous Champion Dallen’s Sport 
and Trimount Bantam. Small size, dark 
brindles and screw tails. Best of pedi- 
gree. Can be seen at 49 Brook st., 
Manchester, Mass., E. H. Ee a 
FOR SALE—romeranians, all colors, very 
small, and puppies from 6 weeks to 9 
months old, at Stud, 4 lb. Black prize 
Winner, $15. A. H. PEMBROKE, 
Coachman, The Estate of Mr. T. C. 
Hollander, Dodge Row, near Grover st., 
Wenham Neck, Mass. tf 
Telephone 8004 
Manchester House 
MANCHESTER, MASS. 
M. J. Callahan, Proprietor 
Furnished Rooms, With Bath, by Day or Week, 
With or Without Meals. 
29000000000000000000000000 
ANTIQUES 
A FINE PRIVATE COLLEC- 
TION OF ORIGINAL AND 
GENUINE ANTIQUES. 
69 CHARLESBANK ROAD 
NEWTON, MASS. 
ABOUT 2 BLOCKS FROM SQUARE. 
Wood Sawed by Machinery 
Work Done Promptly and at a Sav- 
ing from the Old-Fashioned Way. 
8. Albert Sinnicks 
Bennett St. - - Manchester 
Telephone 139-13 
TO LET AT BEVERLY FARMS— 
Tenement of 6 rooms and bath at 752 
Hale street, Ist floor. Apply, Connolly 
Bros. 39 
SITUATIONS WANTED by 2 first class 
laundresses. Call or address ‘‘L,’’? 72 
Pleasant street, Manchester. 39 
FOR SALE—A well-bred Fox Terrier, two 
years old. STANLEY COTTAGE, Man- 
chester, Mass. 39 
SITUATION WANTED by single, middle- 
aged Scotch gardener, as_ assistant 
gardener or florist on private place, on 
or about Nov. Ist. lLife-long  ex- 
perience. GEORGE PETRIE, Care H. 
K. Caner, Manchester. 39-41. 
HEARING 
On petition of Henry W. Nelson of 
Gloucester for permission to construct and 
maintain a floating fish trap at ‘‘Saddle 
Rock,’’ a hearing will be held at the office 
of the Selectmen on Thursday evening, 
October 5, at 7.30 o’clock. 
SELECTMEN OF MANCHESTER. 
Annie Leighton Lane 
TEACHER OF PIANO 
5 Vine St., 
Telephone 247-3 
Manchester 
ADAME PAULINE wishes 
to announce to her many 
friends that she will be pleased to 
see them at her opening Wednesday 
and Thursday, October 4 & 5, 1911. 
Her parlors now are the largest 
in the city. Only parlor that has 
automobile entrance. 
Latest Designs direct from 
New York and Paris 
MM. 
PAULINE 
Desiguer 
stewmme siaezr SALEM, MASS, 
MANCHESTER 
Mrs. David Fenton is making a 
week’s visit at Cohasset the guest 
of her sister. 
Mrs. Choate Rust has been con- 
fined to her home this week, suffer- 
ing severely from an abscess on her 
arm, which made an operation neces- 
sary. She is resting comfortably at 
present. 
Mr. and Mrs. K. J. 
Dorchester, are the guests of Miss 
Anna Maslin, Pleasant street. 
Miss Katherine Watson is enjoy- 
ing her annual vacation from her 
duties at the Town hall, and_ is 
spending it in various parts of New 
Hampshire. 
Born, Wednesday, a daughter to 
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Valgrety of Cen- 
tral street. 
Mrs. Chester L. Crafts is visiting 
in Boston and vicinity for ten days. 
Miss Clara Sargent has returned 
from a week’s vacation spent in 
North Conway,, N. I. 
Macauley of 
Manchester Man Burned to Death 
Wilham Kiss, a former gardener 
at the estate of Mrs. W. Scott Fitz, 
was found suffocated in a room at 
the Lincoln House, 75 Causeway 
street, Boston, about ten o’clock last 
night. The proprietor looking into 
the room, saw the bed afire on which 
Kiss was sleeping. Kiss was taken 
from his perilous position, but it was 
too late, as life was extinet. Dr. 
Murphy of the Relief Hospital staff 
was summoned. He found Kiss 
dead. 
Mr. Kiss registered at the hotel 
on Wednesday, but little 
of him by the proprietor. 
was attracted to the 
by the odor of smoke. 
It is believed that the dead man 
had fallen asleep while smoking in 
was seen 
The latter 
cuest’s room 
bed and that in this way the bed 
clothing had caught aftlre. 
The body was removed to the 
North Grove street morgue awaiting 
a claimant. The deceased boarded 
at 128 Schoel street, of this town. 
Millinery Opening at | Almy, Bigelow 
& Washburn’s, Salem, Mass. 
Fall millinery in all its autumn 
glory—a beautiful picture of many 
hues that is delighting the eyes of 
every attendant at Almy’s fall 
millinery opening day. 
Hats that are exact counterparts 
of the most costly imported models, 
hats that show the clever skill of 
the New York designer, as well as 
the A., B. & W. hats which reflect 
the greatest credit upon their large 
corps of designers and trimmers who 
offer at this fall exhibition, the 
most beautiful array of millinery, 
ever shown in Essex County, 
