MANCHESTER SECTION 
Friday, May 30, 1913. 
MANCHESTER 
Mr. and Mrs. A..B. Sargent and 
Mr. and Mrs. Jordan of Lanesville 
were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. 
L. W. Carter, School street. 
Mr. and Mrs, Benj. lL. Bullock and 
family planned to motor to Needham 
to spend the holiday with Mrs. Bul- 
lock’s family. 
Revere Pulsifer was one of the 
ushers at the reception following the 
wedding in Malden Tuesday after- 
noon of Miss Margaret Greenough of 
Malden and Rowland Skinner of 
Glen Ridge, N. J. 
Gents: We have the right thing for 
solid comfort for your feet in Ground 
Gripper Shoes, Bell’s, Beach street.* 
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Killam have 
again rented their tenement on Des- 
mond avenue to George Keith and 
family of Roxbury. Mr. Keith is 
chauffeur for the Wm. A. Burnhams, 
who have the Stevens cottage. The 
Killams will spend the summer at 
their camp at Lakeman’s Beach, Ip- 
swich. 
James Bettencourt, the Beach 
street tailor, who has been in business 
here the last 17 years (longer than 
any other tailor in town), is located 
over Bell’s store, and is prepared to 
cater to the wants of his many North 
Shore patrons. His specialty is 
cleaning, pressing and repairing 
Umbrellas at E. A. Lethbridge’s. * 
Pretty DANCING Party IN. Man- 
CHESTER Town Hat 
The young men who have been as- 
sociated the past winter at the George 
R. White job on Smith’s Point,—ma- 
sons, carpenters, plumbers, _ electri- 
cians, etc.—joined Wednesday night 
ina grand social gathering in the 
Manchester ‘Town hall, to which affair 
the young men and women of the 
town were invited to the number of 
nearly 200. Prior to the dancing at 
8 o'clock a banquet was tendered to 
Walter W. Bates, in the banquet room 
on the top floor of the hall. Mr. 
Bates represented the contractors in 
charge of the job. About 30 of the 
men attended this. Schlehuber of 
Lynn was the caterer. The following 
menu was. served: ‘Tomato soup; 
baked cod, blue fish and lobster salad; 
cold roast beef, chicken croquets, tur- 
key and cream sauce; green peas and 
mashed potatoes; frozen pudding, 
ice cream, assorted cake; coffee and 
cigars, 
Carey’s orchestra, 8 pieces, fur- 
nished splendid dance music. During 
the evening refreshments were served. 
The party was the largest of the sea- 
son thus far and was a most enjoy- 
able occasion. 
Ladies: Why not try a pair of 
Ground Gripper Shoes? What: they 
have done for others they will do for 
you. Bell’s Central Sq. . 
MANCHESTER 
Dr. Arthur A. Smith and wife of 
Portland, Me., visited the latter’s sis- 
ter, Mrs. A. G. Warner, and family, 
Wednesday. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mead of Wel- 
lesley Farms are spending the holiday 
in town with the latter’s mother, Mrs. 
Anna Woodbury. 
Miss Princie Dodge is home for the 
holiday and has as her guest Miss 
Fanny G. Allen, who is the English 
teacher at York (Maine) High 
school. 
Sorosis shoes at Bell’s Central Sq. 
store. * 
Miss Grace Merrill was home from 
Walnut Hill school over Sunday and 
had with her three of her school- 
mates,—Misses Margaret Rue, Mar- 
jory Lewis and Louise Paysan. 
George Peckham of Rockport, who 
has been recuperating from a severe 
illness with typhoid fever, is back to 
his old position as agent of the 
American express in the Manchester- 
Magnolia-Beverly Farms-Pride’s dis- 
trict. 
C. W. Bayne concluded a short visit 
to Manchester Wednesday with Mr. 
and Mrs. Frank A. Rowe, with whom 
Mrs. Bayne is living for the present. 
Mr. Bayne has now gone to Knoxville, 
Tenn., in the interests of the Panama 
Exhibition Co., of which he is secre- 
tary-treasurer. 
Qn way to National Encampment in Boston in 1904. Picture was taken as the line turned from Union into Beach Streets, 
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