NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
The Gloucester Coal Company 
COAL AND WOOD 
WE CARRY ALL THE BEST GRADES AND SIZES OF COAL 
We handle the CLEANEST and DRYEST of WOOD 
We feature our INFORMATION SERVICE---if you wish to procure the COAL best suited to your 
needs, whether for range, stove, furnace or heater---telephone to us---we can tell you. 
NO ORDER TOO SMALL---NO ORDER TOO LARGE FOR US 
Daily deliveries bb AUTO TRUCK in MANCHESTER, BEVERLY FARMS and VICINITY 
GOOD COAL 
LOWEST PRICES 
Office: 19 Beach Street, Manchester. 
MANCHESTER 
Miss Abbie Floyd and a party of 
friends spent Sunday at camp at 
Annisquam. - 
Robert Prest was drawn as juror 
last Saturday for the November term 
of the superior court at Salem. 
The sidewalk in Central square, at 
the point where the street was wid- 
ened last spring, was widened yester- 
day and is being concreted. 
A meeting of the Manchester 
Launch club will be held Saturday 
evening, Nov. 7. Refreshments will 
be served. 
Division 20, A. O. H., will hold a 
very important meeting in Carpen- 
ter’s hall next Tuesday evening. A 
large attendance is desired. 
_ Allen Relief Corps, No. 119, will 
hold a Sunlight Party in the Town 
hall, Saturday afternoon, Nov. 28. 
There will be an entertainment and 
dancing, and ice-cream and candy will 
be for sale. 
Miss Aline Tarbell of Hudson an- 
nounces that she has resumed her 
teaching of pianoforte, in Manchester 
for the season and may be found, as 
usual, with Supt. and Mrs. Mackin, 
5 North st. She will be in Man- 
chester on Fridays and Saturdays 
throughout the winter. adv. 
The Manchester Trust Co., which 
was three and a half years old on 
Nov. 1, may well feel proud of its 
record. Starting in a small way on 
May 1,-1911, the deposits now total 
nearly three quarters of a million, or, 
te be exact, $748,000. The total as- 
sets of the bank amount to $894,000. 
As another evidence of the unprece- 
dented growth of the bank it might 
be mentioned that the old vault is be- 
ing replaced by a much larger one, 
which will be installed by Dec. 1. 
Safe deposit boxes will be one of the 
features of the new vault. The gen- 
erous support which the summer 
visitors to Manchester and vicinity 
have given the bank is responsible in 
a large measure for its success. 
EQUAL SUFFRAGE 
The Manchester Equal Suffrage 
League held a very pleasant meeting, 
Monday evening, at the home of Mrs. 
F. P. Tenney, Bridge st. 
The chief topic of discussion was 
Belgian Relief work, and it was 
found that Dr. McComb had made a 
deep impression in the Town hall on 
the evening of October 28. Some of 
the ladies are already knitting 
wristers for the soldiers and sailors, 
while the Suffrage League will make 
a specialty of relief for women and 
children. All who are interested«in 
this work are invited to join us or 
to co-operate with us. 
Announcements is made of a public 
meeting of special interest to be held 
in Boston on Sunday afternoon next 
(Nov. 8), at the Tremont theatre, at 
3 o'clock, when Mrs. Pethick-Law- 
rence of England will speak, and will 
be introduced by the Mayor of Bo.- 
ton. Mrs. Pethick-Lawrence is one 
of the finest Suffrage speakers in the 
world and there is special interest to 
hear her at this time. The free seats 
at the theatre will probably all be 
taken early! 
The news from the Suffrage elec- 
tions in the Western states is still so 
incomplete that we can make no com- 
ment on it as yet. But it certainly 
looks as if the liquor interests had 
again won out against us in Ohio. 
Mr. MANN Heaps GLoucestER BANK 
At a meeting of the directors of the 
Gloucester National Bank, Tuesdav, 
Ralph H. Mann, who was _instru- 
mental in organizing the Manchester 
Trust Co. three years ago, was elected 
president to succeed Wm. H. Jordan. 
This is a pleasing bit of news for Mr 
Mann’s many friends and acquain- 
tances in Manchester. 
The Gloucester Bank was estab- 
lished in 1796 as a state bank, and in 
1865 was converted into a national 
bank, and it is therefore nearly a cen- 
tury and a quarter old. It has a rec- 
QUICK SERVICE 
Telephone: Manchester 161 
FOR SALE 
at Smith’s Point (extreme end), 
Manchester-by-the-Sea 
Ram Island (so-called) 
accessible by land—2 6-10 acres 
A SUPERB BUILDING SITE 
none better on the North Shore 
W. L. HARRIS 
114 WASHINGTON ST., 
SALEM, MASS. 
ord to be proud of, having always 
stood strong during the many vicissi- 
tudes of business during all these 
years. 
Mr. Mann will move his family to 
Gloucester, from Great Barrington, 
very shortly. 
Lewis-MAcDONALD 
W. E. Lewis of Manchester and 
Miss Mae Macdonald of Winchester 
were united in marriage Tuesday, 
Nov. 3, at New Preston, Conn., by 
the Rev. T. J. Lewis. After a wed- 
ding trip to Washington, D. C., and 
Roanoke, Va., Mr. and Mrs. Lewis 
will live at 33 Whitney ave., Beverly. 
Mr. Lewis has been agent at the West 
Manchester railroad station for the 
last eight or nine years. 
CooL-KEATHS 
At the Baptist parsonage, Man- 
chester, Wednesday evening, Miss 
Rosa A. Keaths and Ernest Cool, 
both of Manchester, were united in 
marriage by Rev. A. G. Warner. 
Edmund Lethbridge and Miss Sarah 
Kelligrew stood up with them. The 
young couple will live in a cozy little 
bungalow owned by Enoch Crombie 
on the Essex Old road, 
