NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
w 4 w 
* #« Suorivty Notes 4 ¢ 
The Cuban Minister, General Garcia 
Valez, and family, and members of the 
legation left Manchester Thursday morn- 
ing in a special coach attached to the 9.35 
express. The car was taken to the 
North station and from there it was 
switched over to the South station and 
attached to the New York train. 
T. J. Coolidge and party are spending 
a few days motoring through the White 
Mountains. They motored to Concord, 
N. H. last week and, from Concord to 
the Profile House in the Mountains on 
Saturday. In the party are Mr. 
Coolidge, Miss Payson and Frederick 
R. Sears, jr. 
Last Saturday S. Parker Bremer had a 
party of some 25 ladies and gentlemen, 
members and employes of the firm 
of Parker, Wildes & Co., of Boston8 
down to Manchester for an afternoon’s 
outing. ‘The party arrived on the 1.30 
train from Boston and were met at the 
railroad station by automobiles. After a 
ride about town they went to Mr. Brem- 
er’s summer estate on Gale’s Point, 
where the afternoon was spent. A 
lunch was served. ‘The guests returned 
to Boston on an early evening train. 
By the will of the late Mrs. Marie 
Matilda McClure, of Magnolia and Bos- 
ton filed at the probate court, last week, 
the residuary estate is given equally to 
her daughters, Nellie L. Sargent and 
Georgie Lee (Mrs. James Lee). The 
will was executed Aug. 25, 1909. The 
real estate is valued at $146,416, and the 
personal property at $16,233.31. The 
will contains several public bequests, in- 
cluding $600 each to the Lamson school 
at Marshallville, Ga., and to the French- 
American college at Springfield to en- 
able two girls to take the entire collegiate 
course, $1000 each to the American Sun- 
day school union, the instructive district 
nursing association, the Sabbath | pro- 
tective league, the Cullis consumptive 
home, the American tract society and 
the international Y. M. C. A. of New 
York, to provide for religious reading 
matter for soldiers and sailors of the 
United States army and navy. She gives 
#1000 for the library of the institution also 
and $1000 to the Fishermen’s institute of 
Gloucester, which is the remainder of 
£10,000 that she agreed to contribute. 
Mrs. Charles Munn and family, who 
have been abroad all summer, sail for 
home tomorrow. ‘They will spend the 
autumn at Manchester. 
The Stillman Farm, at which Miss 
Helen Frick has been entertaining parties 
of shop and mill girls all summer, closed 
‘The Beast and the Jungle,” 
Judge Lindsey’s autobiogra- 
phy is one of the biggest 
things ever published by any 
magazine. 
It starts in the October 
EVERYBODY’S 
No believer in clean govern- 
ment and right living can afford 
to miss it. 
And don’t let O. Henry’s 
story get by you. It’s one of 
seven crackerjacks in the 
OCTOBER EVERYBODY’S 
For Sale By 
L. W.. FLOYD, 
F. W. VARNEY, 
Manchester 
Beverly Farms 
yesterday for the season. During the 
summer months, several hundred young 
women enjoyed outings at the farm. 
General George W.  Garretson, 
U.S. A. retired, and Mrs. Garretson 
have opened up their beautiful summer 
home on Euclid avenue, Cleveland, O. 
and gone home to spend the winter after 
stopping the entire season at the Ocean- 
side. They have engaged rooms at the 
big hotel for next summer. 
CHRISTINE CAMPBELL 
BEACH STREET, MANCHESTER 
Will sell the remainder of her 
Imported Gowns, Wraps and 
Waists at a greatly reduced 
price, before returning 
to Boston .. 
