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- Herron 
Aug. 25, 1916. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 61 
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both scored on Devlin’s three bagger. 
walked and_ stole second. 
Keefe let Conley’s hit go through and 
two more runs came in. Collins 
walked and Grover was out Keefe to 
MacDonald. It was after Devlin’s 
lusty drive to the brook that Arthur 
was replaced by Karlson. Until the 
seventh inning there was no scoring 
on either side; then Collins drew a 
pass and Grover got the second three 
bagger of the day. Collins scored and 
Grover came in on Perkins single. 
The only Wakefield run was made 
in the eighth inning. Keefe singled to 
right and would have been out at 
- second, but Perkins’ throw struck the 
ground at Herron’s feet. Karlson 
struck out and Gandrean knocked the 
ball over the brook. Collins jumped 
the water and fielded the ball in time 
to stop the runner at second, Keefe 
scoring. Harber flied to Conley and 
Caselden popped to Herron. 
Manchester Bore pO 4d. 8 
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SS a Zor” Oe 0 
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84 812 27 7 3 
Wakefield ab r h po a e 
rendeean bf y.2....... eae LO) Ot 0 
ES 2 ora es 0 
(UO SEs amt Otis agiec owed, 0) 
MacDonald 1b ........ OF (Oberst Oe 
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Manchester ....... 24000020 x—8 
Wakefield 00000001 0—I1 
Earned runs—Manchester 4, Wakefield 1. 
Two-base hits—Cody, Gandrean. Three 
base hits—Grover, Devlin. Bases on balls 
—off Arthur 2, off Karlson 2; off Grover 2. 
Struck ovt—by Arthur 1, Karlson 1; by 
Grover 8. Left on bases—Manchester 9; 
Wakefield 5. Passed _balls—Perkins, 
Flaherty. Sacrifice hits—Herron, Perkins. 
Stolen bases—Cody, Herron. Hit by 
pitcher—by Arthur (Cody, Gourley). Um- 
pire—Walen. Time 2 hrs., 15 minutes. 
“So you went to church last Sun- 
day?” asked the doubtful one. “Then, 
to prove it, what was the text?” “The 
text was, ‘He giveth his beloved 
sleep.” “You’re all right. How 
many of the congregation were 
there?” “All the beloved, it seemed 
-to me.”—Puchk. 
When you think of painting think 
of Tappan, 17 Bridge st., Manches- 
ter. . adv. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
PLUMBING Tel. 12 
HEATING 
John F. Scott 
The turning on and shutting off water for the season a specialty 
Personal attention to all work 
References if desired 
33 years experience 
SHOP AND OFFICE: 112 PINE ST. 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
Edward §. Knight 
FLORIST 
Everything for the Garden. 
ESTABLISHED 1884 
Tel. 10 
40 SCHOOL STREET 
MANCHESTER 
I. E. Irish of the Manchester Trust 
company spent Sunday and Monday 
in Worcester. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Moulton of 
West Manchester have been spending 
the week on a vacation trip to Nan- 
tucket. 
We do any kind of fine sewing to 
order at the Gift Shop, Central sq. adv. 
Charles F. Parks, a Beverly man, 
was arrested Monday morning by 
Chief Sullivan and Motor Policeman 
Bullock for driving his automobile 
while under the influence of liquor. 
Parks struck the R. H.-Dana ma- 
chine in front of the Lane estate, 
Sumner street, and damaged both 
machines slightly. Only the chauffeur 
was occupying the Dana car. Both 
drivers escaped injury. In the Salem 
district court Tuesday morning Parks 
pleaded guilty to the charge of driv- 
ing’a car while under the influence 
of liquor, preferred against him by 
Chief Sullivan, and was fined $50 and 
sentenced to the house of correction 
for three months. He paid the fine 
and the jail sentence was suspendec 
for three months, during which time 
Parks will be under probation. 
Educator and Walton Shoes for 
Children. W.R.Bell’s, Central sq. adv. 
Flowers for all Occasions 
MANCHESTER 
Manchester people are attracted to 
the motion picture entertainments 
given each Friday evening in Neigh- 
bor’s hall, Beverly Farms. 
WILBUR THEATRE, Boston. 
“Very Good Eddie,” musical play 
by Philip Bartholomae, Guy Bolton, 
Jerome Kern and Schuyler Green, 
founded on the farce, “Over Night,” 
has made a tremendous hit at the Wil- 
bur Theatre, Boston, where it enters 
on its 3rd week next Monday even- 
ing, Aug. 28. 
“Very Good Eddie,” is character- 
ized by the same simplicity and re- 
finement that made “Nobody Home” 
so welcome an attraction at this thea- 
tre a year ago. It comes here, as did 
its predecessor, from a long run at 
the Princess Theatre in New York, a 
little playhouse presided over by Miss 
Elizabeth Marbury and Ray Com- 
stock, producing managers who have 
_reaped rich rewards by adherence to 
their convictions that extravagant 
splendor and boisterous nonsense are 
not the prime requisites of successful 
musical comedy. 
The cast is made up of thoroughly 
competent players, most of whom sing 
quite well enough. Ernest Truex, 
who was the diminutive Mr. Kettle 
of the original farce, plays the same 
role again, and dainty Alice Dovey 
impersonates the tiny Mrs. Darling. 
Lehigh Valley Coal Sales Company | 
COAL 
SAMUEL KNIGHT SONS CC 
32 CENTRAL STREET 
TELEPHONE 202 
MANCHES ey 
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