6 
ahah hed clea el ed ch habead 
2 € 
2 x MMawhesier x ¢ 
2 € 
Next Wednesday evening at the home 
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. 
Crombie, Beach street, Miss Amy B. 
Crombie of this town and Henry Witt 
of Belchertown will be united in 
marriage. “The wedding will be a very 
quiet affair, only the immediate family at- 
tending. Miss Crombie has taught in 
Belchertown for several years. Mr. 
Witt is a prosperous young farmer of 
that place, and dealer in lumber. 
Miss Pitman, employed at Reed’s res- 
taurant, had a close call at the local 
station Sunday night. She tried to cross 
the tracks to geton the Gloucester-bound 
train which goes a little after seven, and 
was pulled from in front of the engine by 
Officer Sheehan just as the engine 
brushed by. “Those who saw the affair 
say the officer grabbed her just in the 
nick of time. 
The old barn on the Chase estate, at 
Old Neck, is being torn down. ‘The 
building is some 200 years old, and is 
one of the oldest buildings in town. 
There is hardly a_nail to be found in it, 
except such as were used in making re- 
pairs in recent years. 
The dredging apparatus arrived last 
Saturday and has been making good pro- 
gress in dredging the channel in the 
inner harbor. ‘The mud is being thrown 
onto Masconomo park. 
The offices in the Town hall building 
have been treated to a spring cleaning 
the past week. Edward Crowell, the 
painter, has been the artist in charge. 
Bruce Chapman is to give a talk be- 
forethe Phi Alpha Pi boys tonight on 
his trip around the world with the U. S. 
battleship fleet. 
Mrs. Albert W. Mead has _ the 
sympathy ofa large circle of friends 
in Manchester in the death of her sister, 
Mrs. Ella H. Johnson Hill, at Concord, 
N. H., last Tuesday morning. Mrs. 
Hill was the wife of William W. Hill, a 
well known citizen of Concord. Her 
illness was a long and distressing one. 
The Concord Monitor said of her: 
Mrs. Hill was a woman of remarkable 
qualities. She had an unerring taste for 
art and letters, was widely read and pos- 
sessed a mind of rare discrimination. 
She was unusually compassionate by na- 
ture and the memory of good deeds 
springs up along almost every day of her 
life. She was respected by all and be- 
loved by the many who knew her in any 
of the circles where her activities led her. 
Her loss to many a good cause will long 
be felt and the happy memories of her 
cheerful and helpful life will long en- 
dure.’’ 
Easter cards at E. A. Lathbridge’s. * 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
SPECIAL CASH PRICES FOR SATURDAY 
Native Chickens 30c Ib Fancy Spinach 
Native Fowl 20c lb Large Lettuce 
Fresh Eastern Pork 15c lb Extra Good Lemons 
Legs of Lamb 18c Ib Hubbard Squash 
The Largest Navel Oranges in Town, 30c doz 
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