NaeO> eT 
Manchester Young Woman’s Success 
—WMiss Florence Forster Leach. 
The many Manchester friends of 
Miss Florence Forster Leach, as 
well as her host of friends in Bos- 
ton and elsewhere, are pleased to 
note the success of this promising 
young Manchester woman. Only 
last week did Miss Leach pass her 
18th birthday, but at this age she 
possesses talents in musical and 
dramatic lines which many with 
years of experience would envy. 
We speak of Miss Leach as a 
Manchester girl, for though she has 
lived most of her life in Boston, 
Manchester is her home and_ the 
home of her family for more than 
200 years back. Miss Leach was 
graduated last June from the Girls’ 
Latin school in Boston, and was to 
have entered Radeliffe this fall, 
having passed her examinations for 
that institution. She is very desir- 
ous, however, of taking up some 
work along the line in which she 
possesses such talent, and to that 
S2. Hs Ofna 
the Castle Square Theatre next 
week, 
Miss Leach has been studying 
music and dramatic art since she 
BREE Z&E 23 
MANCHESTER. 
Arthur 8. Dow, owner of the 
building occupied by Perkins & Cor- 
liss as a garage, has commenced 
work on an addition to the building, 
to be made of concrete.» It will be 
40x 45 feet, giving the garage 4500 
square feet of floor space. Morley 
& Flatley have the contract for the 
masonry and concrete work. The 
roof and ceiling will be metal. The 
building will be heated by hot water 
and modern conveniences will be 
put in. This work will be done by 
the R. Robinson Co. Howard A. 
Doane has the contract for the car- 
penter work. 
Boston, for a number of years. She 
has appeared in a number of ama- 
teur performances in Jordan Hall 
and elsewhere in recent years. 
Miss Leach is the daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. George C. Leach, who 
summer at the old Forster house on 
Central street, Manchester, one of 
the oldest houses in town, built by 
Mr. Leach’s great-grandfather, Ma- 
end she has gone as an extra girl in 
the Castle Square Stock on of FLORENCE FORSTER LEACH 
which John Craig is the head, hop- 
ing in this way to work her way up. 
She has already been given a little 
part as maid in ‘‘Why Smith Left 
Home,’’ which is to be presented at 
jor Israel Forster, so prominently 
identified with the Manchester of 
fonr or five generations ago. The 
family has spent their winters at 
the Oxford in Boston, but this year 
they have taken a small apartment 
in Huntington Hall. 
was a mere child. She has been at- 
tending the Curry School of Ex- 
pression and the Faelten Pianoforte 
School, both on Huntington avenue, 
ALMY, BIGELOW & WASHBURN, Ine, s ws: 
ANNUAL FALL OPENING 
MILLINERY 
Extreme Beauty—Smartness—Elegance—and above all—Be- 
comingness’—are the chief characteristics of this new fall mill- 
inery. Our milliners have done themselves proud in_ their 
efforts to make the A. B. & W. millinery representative of 
Fashion’s most favored types. 
Exact copies of Paris models, New York pattern hats, as well 
as a wealth of the cleverest adaptations of what is most fash- 
ionable in the millinery world—the work of our most skilled 
corps of trimmers and designers—are shown in this exposition 
of fall and winter millinery styles. 
AN AUTHENTIC STYLE PRESENTATION OF 
, THE MOST BEAUTIFUL MILLINERY 
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED 
