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ALDARA ALARA IOAN LUDA me 
Edward Crowell returned yesterday 
from aten days’ vacation trip to New 
Hampshire and Vermont. 
The Haphazard club will meet next 
Monday evening, Feb. 15, with Mr. and 
Mrs. Alfred C. Needham, Union street. 
The class of 707, Manchester High 
school, are planning on holding a reunion 
in the Town hall on theevening of April 
14. 
A little daughter, Dorothy May, ar- 
rived in the Baptist parsonage Wednes- 
day noon to gladden the home of Rev. 
-and Mrs. Theodore Lyman Frost. 
_ At the annual meeting and banquet of 
the Mass. Highway association at the 
Copley Square hotel, Boston, ‘Tuesday, 
George Kimball of Manchester, retir- 
ing president, acted as toastmaster. 
Miss Charlotte B. Howland of Ply- 
mouth, spent Wednesday and Thursday 
of this week with her classmate at the 
Wheelock Kindergarten Training school, 
Miss Edith Northup, Bennett street. 
The Standing Committee of the Mass. 
Catholic Order of Foresters gave a din- 
ner at the Boston City club “Tuesday 
evening for the medical examiners of the 
order. Dr. R. T. Glendenning of this 
town was among those present. 
A. Jacobs, who was associated with 
Paul Weil, the postoffice block tailor last 
summer, will have one of A. S. Dow’s 
shops on Beach street this next sum- 
mer,—the one occupied by Johnson & 
Bergqvist, tailors, last season. 
** Guest Night’? of the Manchester 
Woman’s club will be observed next 
Tuesday evening at the Town hall, and 
will be, nc doubt, quite the social event 
of the winter in §Manchester. Ary>ody 
may attend by procuring a ticket through 
any of the members, and it might be 
well to remind the members that today 
is the last day set for procuring tickets 
from the treasurer, Miss Bertha Stone. 
A reception will be held at 7.30, when 
the officers of the club will be in the re- 
ceiving line. This will te followed at 8 
o’ clock by a lecture on “‘Wireless Tel- 
eeraphy ~~ by Prof. A. B. Tripp.. — It 
is expected this will be particularly in- 
teresting at this time, in view of the 
important part wireless telegraphy played 
in the recent marine disaster. “Those 
present will be given an opportunity to 
examine the instruments used by Prof. 
Tripp after the lecture, and of asking 
him questions pertaining thereto. ~A so- 
cial hour will bring the evening toa 
= close. 
Nice 
cheap, at 
street. 
Parlor Stove, almost new; 
Woodbury’s block, Beach 
* 
44 Central St., 
Personal Attention Given to all Work. Estimates cheerfully given. 
EDWARD S. BRADLEY 
PRACTICAL PLUMBER 
HOT WATER HEATING. 
GAS FIT TING 
Telephone Connection 
Manchester-by-the-Sea. 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
We call attention to the advertisement 
of N. P. Meldrum in this issue offering 
for sale a nearly new house, with seven 
rooms, all modern conveniences, loca- 
ted about ten minutes walk from the 
town center. 
Fred J. Merrill and Horace Standley 
left Monday for a two weeks’ vacation 
trip South. “They went from Boston by 
boat to Norfolk, Va., and from there 
they planned to goto Savannah and, per- 
haps, to Jacksonville. 
Assessor and Mrs. Fred K. Swett re 
turned Wednesday from a three weeks’ 
trip to St. Augustine, Palm Beach and 
other points in Florida. ‘This is the 
busy season in Florida, and people flock 
there from all over the country to spend 
the winter months. Mr. Swett returns 
In time to-get in line for town election 
a little over two weeks’ hence. He isa 
candidate for the board of selectmen and 
he is counted upon as being a sure win- 
ner. 
Frank Currier of Beverly Farms, was 
a guest of Mrs. Robert Baker over Sun- 
day. 
SAMUEL KNIGHT & SONS 
COAL and WOOD 
ae 
: ) 
= 
—A, 
36 Central Street 
Manchester-by-the-Sea 
GEO. W. Hooper, 
DEALER IN 
FIRST-CLASS GROCERIES 
Kitchen Furnishings 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
SHELDON’S MARKET 
Established 1845. 
Poti) ©) PiOR- Prop. 
Telephone 67 
DEALER IN 
First-Class Provisions, Poultry, Game, Yegetables,ete. 
Central Street, 
PRIDE’ S CROSSING. 
MANCHESTER2BY=THE2SEA 
BEVERLY FARMS. 
MAGNOLIA. 
| Every Neighborhood has it its Leading Drug 6 Store 
*% In this Neighborhood Our Pharmacy Leads 
Because: 
clean. 
Second, our prices are always right. 
First, our stock is large and complete, and our goods are fresh and 
People visiting our store are always 
promptly waited upon and not kept waiting. 
Third, our Prescription Department is fully equipped with all modern con- 
veniences for compounding prescriptions. 
best we can obtain. 
Our drugs and chemicals are the 
OUR STORE iS THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED DRUG STORE BETWEEN BEVERLY AND GLOUCESTER 
ae Gilbert MacDonald is in charge of our Prescription Department. 
Benj. L. Allen, 
Telephone: 257 
Registered Pharmacist 
Established in 1856 
