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GOOD COAL 
MANCHESTER 
The North Shore Horticultural so- 
ciety holds its annual meeting tonight 
- for the nomination of officers. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Edmonds of 
Bennett street have been spending the 
week at Portland, Maine. They went 
down by motor last Thursday. Ns 
Mr. and Mrs. Roy MacDonald 
(Ada Crombie) of Montserrat were 
in town over the holiday as guests 
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Crombie. 
George Horsford of Haverhill was 
in town over the holiday, the guest of 
Mr and Mrs. Charles H. Peart, Ben- 
nett street. 
Men’s and Boys’ sweaters at Walt 
Bell’s, Central sq. adv. 
Printing 
that will represent your 
business promptly and 
accurately done at the 
Breeze Office 
MANCHESTER, MASS. 
having new customers. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
ee 
LOWEST PRICES 
Daily Deliveries in Manchester, Beverly Farms and Vicinity. 
The Gloucester Coal Company 
Begs to Announce 
The OPENING OF A NEW OFFICE at 19 Beach St., Manchester, where they are daily 
There’s a reason— we please particular people. 
TELEPHONE us FOR Coal AND Woop. REVERSE THE CHARGE TO us—the service is free to you—AND 
A TELEPHONE CALL BRINGS OUR TRUCK ‘TO Your Door. 
QUICK SERVICE 
TELEPHONE MANCHESTER IOI 
ARBELLA CLUB MEETS 
The first meeting of the Arbella 
club this season was held at the Con- 
gregational chapel, Manchester, Tues- 
day afternoon with a large attendance 
present. The membership amounts to 
about 150 now. 
The meeting was opened by Miss 
Fanny Knight, the new president, and 
the first number of the program was 
a piano solo by Miss Helen Knight, 
one of the Camp-Fire girls, who 
furnished the autumn foliage for a 
most effective decoration of the 
chapel. The members of the Camp- 
Fire girls, a comparatively new organ- 
ization here, are Misses Helen Chee- 
ver, Madeline and Pauline Semons, 
Margaret O’Brien, Melissa Stanley, 
May Gray, Helen Knight, Helen 
Johnson, Katherine Northrup, Elsie 
McCormack, Nina Sinnicks and An- 
nie Lane. The girls of this body at- 
tended in their uniforms and acted as 
ushers. 
The members of the club, new and 
old, were welcomed and a brief sketch 
of the work and play of the coming 
year was given. There are to be sew- 
ing, cooking and gymnastic classes, 
for which a small fee will be charged. 
Lemonade, sandwiches and crackers 
were served by the committee. The 
meeting was an enthusiastic one and 
the coming year promises to be pros- 
perous for the club, which, though 
still in its infancy, has done so much 
for Manchester girls and young 
women. 
“My WINTER IN CALIFORNIA” 
Harmony Guild met at the Congre- 
gational chapel, Manchester, Monday 
evening and was entertained by a 
most delightful talk by Miss Gertrude 
Goldsmith on “My Winter in Cali- 
fornia.” Miss Goldsmith is an in- 
structor in the Salem Normal School 
and is a pleasing speaker with a gift 
of vivid description, and her account 
of her winter at Berkeley, where she 
studied at the University of Cali- 
fornia, was full of interest. She also 
visited Pasadena, which impressed 
her as the most beautiful of the Cali- 
fornian cities, with Santa Barbara 
ranking second. At Pasadena is lo- 
cated the San Gabriel Mission where 
Romona is said to have been baptized. 
Four of the six bells in the cupola 
of this mission are left and are still 
in use and the original vestments of 
the Franciscan fathers may still be 
seen there. Pasadena is in the heart 
of the poinsettia region where the 
brilliant scarlet flowers grow in 
masses and to a great height. 
The speaker was also impressed 
with the vineyards, the ostrich farm 
and the alligator farm of that district. 
Monterey, Miss Goldsmith  pro- 
nounced the most interesting of the 
towns, both historically and_intel- 
lectually. It is a hill town, pictur- 
esque in its neglect. The speaker 
spent a week in the wonderful Yose- 
mite valley and gave splendid descrip- 
tions of the points of interest and of 
the famous beauty spots, such as 
Sierra Point, Nevada Falls, etc. 
The Guild has decided to do some 
Red Cross work for the wounded 
soldiers of the European war in line 
with most of the other organizations 
around Boston. Sheets and pillow- 
cases are to be made. 
ALEXANDER-HUTCHINSON 
John Alexander and Miss Flora 
Hutchinson, both of Manchester, 
were united in marriage at the Con- 
gregational parsonage last Saturday 
evening, by Rev. Chas. A. Hatch. 
They will reside at 17 Brook st. 
Manchester. 
William Penn, in his Charter of 
Rights, provided that for every five 
acres of forest cleared one acre 
should be left in woods. Foresters 
today maintain that on an average 
one-fifth of every farm should be in 
timber. 
Wireless telegraphy is being used 
in Canada in reporting on forest fires, 
