No 
on) 
N O RT H 
S: Csr Ue tes B 
R EEZE 
Telephone 190 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SBA. 
Postoffice Bloek ; 
Bullock Brothers, Fine Groceries 
Veuve Chaffard Olive Oil, 
Swansdown Flour, 
Brigham Creamery Batter 
AGENT FOR HILLCREST WATER CO. 
, SCIEN 
S. S. Pierce Co.’s Fancy Groceries 
RL AISI LIA APIA 
:: Daggett’s, Samoset and Johnston’s Chocolates :: 
SPECIAL: One Pound Box Chocolates 35¢c 
Manchester 
Fruit Store 
Ring 
160 
P. VOTTEROS PROP. (Successor to M. G. Revelas) 
Postoffice Block, - - - = 
Manchester-by-the-Sea 
We deliver your order free of charge in Manchester, Magnolia, Beverly Farms and Pride’s 
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 
.. Telephone .. 
Opposite High School 
Manchester, Mass. 
RUBLY ROAD FART DAIRY, WENHATN 
MILK and CREAM, Fresh Eggs 
Telephone Conn. 
P. 0. Address, Manchester, Mass. 
S. K. PRINCE. Prop. 
Announcement 
I WISH TO ANNOUNCE TO 
MY FRIENDS AND ACQUAIN- 
TANCES OF MANCHESTER 
THAT I HAVE TAKEN THE 
AGENCY FOR THE DOMESTIC 
AND GOODRICH SEWING MA- 
CHINES. 
TO HAVE YOU CALL AND SEE 
THESE MACHINES. 
GEO. WOODBURY 
Woodbury’s Bik. Beach Street 
Manchester. 
Dr. Leon H. Vincent will lecture 
upon ‘‘Nathaniel Hawthorne,’’ be- 
fore the Manchester Woman’s club 
at their next regular meeting, Tues- 
day ,October 16th. The Year Books 
will be ready for distribution at that 
meeting. Tickets will go on sale for 
the publie lecture given by Rev. 
Henry R. Rose on November Ist, 
under the auspices of the Woman’s 
elub. The lecture ‘‘With Long- 
fellow in Evangeline Land’’ is illus- 
trated by beautiful colored stereop- 
ticon slides. Those who heard Dr. 
Rose at the Club Guest Night, two 
I WILL BE PLEASED > 
years ago, will remember him with 
pleasure. Admission 25¢. Reserved 
seats 35e. 
Red-Man Collars at Bell’s, 
tral square. : 
Rev. L. H: Ruge will preach Sun- 
day morning at the Congregational 
chureh on ‘‘ The Desire for Per- 
manency.’’ In the evening at 7 
o'clock, his subject will be ‘‘Play- 
ing the Game of Life with the 
Devil.’’ 
The local K of C was represented 
in the big parade in Boston yester- 
day by a good-sized delegation that 
left here on the 11.38 train. 
Lamson & Hubbard Fall Hats at 
Bell’s. s 
Miss Anna Maslin is elerking at 
Cawthorne’s bakery, Central strect. 
Miss Nellie Allen joined her par- 
ents at West Manchester the first of 
the week, after a visit in Rochester, 
INA Yar 
Miss Elsie Northrup has a position 
as assistant secretary to Francis J. 
Cotting of Boston and Pride’s, and 
is living in Boston this fall and 
winter. 
Emerson, Douglas 
oxfords at Bell’s. 
Harmony Guild will meet at the 
chapel on Monday evening, October 
16th, at 7.45 o’clock. 
Cen- 
a 
and Nesmith 
* 
MANCHESTER 
Mrs. Frederick J. Merrill de- 
parted Wednesday morning for a 
two weeks’ visit with relatives in 
Buffalo, N. Y., and vicinity. 
Two graceful deer were seen in 
the vicinity of the Brownland cot- 
tage, Sea street, on Wednesday 
morning. 
George Beaton will spend the 
week-end at his home in Hudson to 
attend the wedding of a sister on 
Monday. 
Musicale at Baptist Church 
Last Friday evening G. Allyn 
Brown, organist of the Manchester 
Baptist church, arranged a very fine 
concert at the church. The talent 
came from out of town and included 
students from the New England 
Conservatory of Music. Miss . 
becea Andrews of Gloucester, was 
the soprano soloist, 
Ridley, of Boston, cellist; Benjamin 
Posner, of Boston, violinist, and Mr. 
Brown, accompanist. Mrs. Char- 
lotte E. Brown of Manchester, was 
the reader. 
The program opened with Men- 
delssohn’s trio for stringed instru- 
ments and introduced the violinist, 
cellist and Mr. Brown, pianist, in a 
fine reading of the scores of the An- 
dante and Scherzo‘from the com- 
poser’s D minor trio. An organ 
number, Lemare’s Andantino, fol- 
lowed. It was a_ request number 
executed most pleasingly by Mr. 
Brown. Miss Andrews, who is not 
a stranger in Manchester, displayed 
her vocal gifts in the Aria from 
‘‘Samson and Delila’’ by St. Saens. 
Mr. Posner, who has appeared to— 
ereat advantage on other occasions 
in Manchester, repeated his success” 
in a selected violin solo which next 
followed. Mrs. Brown’s monologue 
depicting a mother at the beach with 
her children furnished the humor-— 
ous note of the evening and was cor- 
dially received. 
Part two of the program presented 
Miss Ridley as a cello soloist. Her 
number was Popper’s Andacht. 
The other numbers were: Prelude, 
Romance and Finale, violin, ’cello 
and piano, by Parker; Processional 
March for organ from ‘‘The Queen 
of Sheba,’’ by Gounod, Mr. Brown; 
Songs, (a) ‘‘A Little Winding 
Road,’’ by Ronald, (b) ‘‘Ah, Love 
for a Day,’’ by Mrs. Beach, (@) 
‘“‘The Danza,’’ by Chadwick, Miss: 
Andrews; Scherzo from D_ minor 
trio. violin, ’cello and piano by 
Schumann. The concert was dis- 
tinctly a high class one and an able 
and artistic exposition of the great 
composers. 
Re-— 
Miss Mildred 
a ee << as = re Se ee ee ee ee, ee i 
