MANCHESTER SECTION | 
Mrs. Harry FE. Slade returned 
Monday from a visit with Mrs. Wal- 
ter Knight and family in Reading. 
The next meeting of the Arbella 
club will be a home meeting Tuesday 
Nov. 25th at 4 o’clock in the Con- 
gregational chapel. 
‘The Harvard-Yale game tomorrow 
will draw a number of Manchester 
people to Cambridge for the annual 
combat. 
Full line of fall and winter gloves 
at Walt Bell’s, Central square. A 
Officer Thomas Sheehan thas been 
housed the past week by illness. 
Special Officer Cook is taking his 
place on night duty. 
Mr, and Mrs. Gilbert West and 
two younger children, of Amesbury, 
were in town last Saturday to visit 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Floyd (Edna 
West), Central Square. 
Fall and winter styles in Lamson 
& Hubbard hats at Bell’s Beach eee 
store. 
Harry Whesten, ass stant anc 
at (the electric railway office in Haver- 
hill, is having ‘his annual vacation, 
part of which he is spending in Man- 
chester visiting Geo. R. Steward and 
family, Pine street. 
Jos, W. Cawthorne, Jr., who was 
recently married is keeping house in 
Brighton. He is running a large 
circulating library in Newton, and is 
also handling a side line of auto 
goods for the Green & Swett Co., of 
Boston. 
Buy your Providence River, War- 
ren River and Cape Oysters at the 
Manchester Fish Market, phone 163.* 
Manchester Red Men who have 
been visitors (to the wigwam of 
Chickataubut tribe at Beverly, learn 
with regret the calamity that over- 
took ithat tribe last Friday evening. 
One hundred and fifty members and 
guests, including more than 50 squaws 
were gathered in one of the other 
halls in the building ready to march 
to the banquet hall, when it was dis- 
covered the place was afire. {The 
tribe’s headquarters and much of ithe 
paraphernalia was destroyed and 
damage to the rest of the block, in- 
cluding stores and offices to the value 
of $20,000 was done. 
Friday, November 21, 1913. 
Mr, and Mrs. David H. Mitchell 
of Charlestown announce the engage- 
ment of their daughter, Blanche 
Stoddard Bailey, to Bertram P. 
Floyd of Manchester. 
Born at Calgary, Canada, Nov. 
11th, a son, Lawrence ‘Talbot, to Mr. 
and Mrs. George Cleveland. Mrs. 
Cleveland was Miss Katherine Wat- 
son of this town. 
Infants’ 75c Saques for 50c at 
A. Lethbridge’s. 
Miss Anna Oleson of Salem, a 
member of the class of 1913, Salem 
Commercial school, is the new steno- 
grapher in the office of the Manches- 
ter Electric Co. 
Geo, M. Mansell of Ces hae tribe 
of Red Men, Lynn, has been appoint- 
ed deputy of Conomo tribe at Man- 
chester. Fred C. Dougherty of Man- 
chester is the new deputy of Saga- 
more, 
‘The open season on deer this week 
have attracted many would-be hunt- 
ers to the woods all day and in many 
cases most of the night. Thus far, 
however, we have to learn of the first 
deer being killed. Duck hunting, too, 
has attracted many. 
Red Man Collars at Walt Bell’s, 
Central Sq. “ 
Let us call for your order for fish 
on Mondays and ‘Thursdays, for 
‘Tuesday’s and kriday’s use. Every- 
thing fresh and first quality. Man- 
chester Fish Market, Central Sq. 
Bhionie 163. = 
The golden wedding-anniversary of 
Mr. and Mrs. George Burchstead at 
Salem one day this week, proved a 
very enjoyable occasion for the rela- 
tives and friends from here who at- 
tended. They formerly lived in 
Manchester. 
More or less complaint is being re- 
ceived by the police of the mischiev- 
ous work of the boys about town. 
One morning recently somebody 
broke the windows cut of the shanty 
used by the aged John Bennett as a 
home, on Lincoln street. Mr. Ben- 
nett was out fishing at the time. 
Street lamps and windows are being 
smashed by sling-shots and the com- 
plaints are getting all too numerous. 
The boys thad better take care, or,—? 
he is spending in 
= 
Miss Eleanor Morgan was at 
Hampton Falls, over the last week- 
end. 
Letter-carrier W. S$. Hodgdon is 
concluding a week’s vacation tomor- 
row night. 
William Nolan, one of the popular 
clerks at Allen’s Drug ‘store is having 
a two weeks’ vacation, part of which 
New York and 
Washington. 
Emerson, Douglas and Ground 
Gripper shoes at Bell’s Beach street 
store. * 
Several of those most actively in- 
terested in the anti-suffrage move- 
ment attended the meeting in Pitueau 
hall, Tremont Temple, Boston, yes- 
terday. 
Bertram Floyd was ‘home from 
Boston Sunday accompanied by Miss 
Blanche Bailey of Charlestown. Mr. 
Floyd thas a responsible position with 
the Aberthaw Construction Co., con- 
crete engineers, Boston. 
The High ‘school dance to be held 
next Wednesday evening, — Thanks- 
giving eve—in the Manchester Town 
hall, will undoubtedly prove the most 
popular social event of the coming 
week. It is given by the Junior 
class. 
Very best of Warren River Oy- 
sters, nothing better for invalids, at 
Beach St. Restaurant. a 
It is expected the dredger will 
complete its work here this week, 
after doing some $17,000 worth of 
dredging on the inner harbor. More 
than half of this amount was given 
by the state and the balance by tihe 
town. ‘T'he benefits derived by the 
town will be better felt next summer 
than now, and in the years to come 
the benefits will grow rather than de- 
crease. A wide basin with six feet 
of water at low tide is what has been 
provided, and this will allow of large 
yachts anchoring in the inner harbor. 
There is now room for a whole fleet 
of them. A channel too feet wide 
leads straight out into Salem bay. At 
the rate of 27 cents a yard, some 
63,000 square yards of mud have 
been scooped from the harbor during 
the last month or more and carried 
out into the bay. 
a a 
G. E. WILLMONTON 
Attorney and 
Counselor at Law 
WILLMONTON’S AGENCY 
Real Estate and Insurance of All Kinds 
School and Union Sts., Manchester :-: Old South Bidg., Boston 
SUMMER HOUSE FOR 
RENT 
MORTGAGES - LOANS 
TEL. CONN. 
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