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NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MR. AND MRS. CHARLES HOOPER OF MANCHESTER 
CELEBRATE THEIR GOLDEN WEDDING 
MR. AND MRS. CHARLES HOOPER 
Mr. and Mrs, Chas. Hooper, two of 
Manchester’s best known residents, 
observed the 50th anniversary of 
the marriage last Friday, Marzh 24, 
at their home on School strect. No 
plans were made for a formal recep- 
tion, but Mr. and Mrs. Hooper were 
ealled upon to receive the congrat- 
ulations of many friends and rela- 
tives who called on the occasion. For 
Mrs. Hooper it was a double cele- 
bration, it being her seventieth 
birthday. Mr. Hooper is 74. 
Mr. and Mrs. Hooper are both 
natives of Manchester, the former 
being one of nine children, seven 
boys and two girls, —the latter de- 
ceased. Four of the seven sons are 
now living, three of them, George, 
Franklin K., and Charles being in 
in Manchester, and the 
fourth, Edward, living at the Cove. 
Mr. Hooper was a cabinet maker 
in his younger days, lke most 
young men in Manchester at that 
time. For the last thirty-one years 
he has conducted a shoe store here. 
Mr. and Mrs. Hooper were mar- 
ried in Beverly, at the home of Mrs. 
Hooper’s sister, Mrs. Susan Patch, 
by Rev. Mr. Abbott of the Congre- 
gational church. 
While Mr. and Mrs. Hooper are 
not enjoying the best of health at 
present, they are both able to at- 
tend to their accustomed duties. 
Until within a year or so Mr. Hoop- 
er has enjoyed remarkably good 
health. The Breeze joins with their 
host of friends in wishing them many 
years more of happy life. 
Expert Golfist, Tennis Player Adds 
New Laurels for Wood- 
é Chopping. 
The following dispatch in one of 
the Sunday papers tells of new 
honors gained by a well known 
Manchester young woman: . 
‘‘Pittsfield, March 25.—Miss Isa- 
bel P. Curtis, a member of a rich and 
prominent family in Boston, who has 
been spending several weeks at the 
fashionable Willis Inn in Stock- 
bridge, is the champion woman 
wood-chopper of the Berkshires. 
’ Buying an axe this week in a local 
store, she told the proprietor she 
could cut down a tree as quickly as 
any man. 
‘‘Miss Curtis is in Stockbridge for 
her health and because she likes life 
in the country and woods better than 
the social whirl of the Hub. She is 
the daughter of Mrs. Greeley S. Cur- 
tis of No. 28 Mt. Vernon street, 
Boston. 
‘‘Besides chopping down trees, 
Miss Curtis has sawed several cords 
of hard wood for Charles H. Willis, 
proprietor of the inn. She often 
walks from Stockbridge to Lenox 
and return, twelve miles.”’ 
Train Now Stops at Beverly. 
The train going up the Gloucester 
‘yOO]O, 0 JYSLO JNOGe SSUTUAIOUL YOURIG 
and running express from Montser- 
rat, now stops at Beverly, and will 
continue to do so from now on. 
Patronize the Breeze. 
13. 
BEVERLY SHORE 
$15,000 
Buys splendid estate, 10,000 ft. of 
land, and modern house of 15 rooms 
on ocean front of the beautiful Bev- 
erly Shore, Mass., the 
Nice lawn, seawall 
and good boating and bathing. Un- 
obstructed view of the ocean and dis- 
tant islands in the bay. 
SAMUEL H. STONE 
164 Cabot St., Beverly 
OXFORD 
GARAGE 
156 Broad Street 
LYNN, MASS. 
Telephone 1720 
Second Hand Cars 
1910 Oldsmobile seven pass- 
enger touring car overhauled 
and repainted, fully equipped. 
1907 Winton Model M, seven 
passenger overhauled and re- 
painted, fully equipped. 
1910 Cadillac Demi Tonneau 
overhauled and repainted, fully 
equipped. 
1910 Overland Double bucket 
seat with glass front and speed- 
ometer. 
Beverly, 
summer capital. 
STARR C. HEWITT 
..OPTICIAN... 
158 Essex Street, SALEM 
THE GRINDING OF LENSES 
Is a delicate operation. 
lenses. 
We grind all 
Factory on premises. Lenses 
fitted to all new styles of centers includ- 
ing Shur-On, So-Easy, Globe, Special, 
Fits-U, New Century, Standard, etc., 
etc. 
STARR @. HEWITT 
158 Essex Street, Salem 
