MANCHESTER SECTION 
Miss May T*yans of Natick was in 
town over the week-end a guest of 
her brother, Supt. George Evans of 
the Water Works. 
Mrs. E. Hersey Brewster and three 
children of Patten, Me., have been 
spending the past week with the for- 
mer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Levi A. 
Dunn, Central st. 
Bathing Stits, ate BAS. beth- 
bridge’s adv, 
Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Tappan, Bridge 
street, have as guests for a two 
weeks’ visit their nieces, Miss Evelyn 
Ryan of Roslindale and Miss Marion 
Shea of Worcester. 
Singing Beach Brand Cod Fish at 
Swett's Market. adv. 
The Red Men’s picnic will be held 
next Tuesday, July 28th, at Tuck’s 
Point. It will be an all-day affair 
with chowder dinner at one o’clock. 
Members and their families will at- 
tend. Tickets may be procured from 
the committee, Clifford Doane, chair- 
man; Edward W. Baker, Philip Crot- 
teau, William Roberts, J . W. An- 
drews and Mark Lodge. 
Get your gloves cleaned by the 
Parisian Laundry. E. A. Lethbridge, 
agent. adv. 
Mrs. John J. Driscoll and little 
daughter of Orient Heights have been 
spending the past two weeks in Man- 
chester, at Mrs. Scott’s on Norwood 
ave. Mr. Driscoll is one of Boston’s 
corps of playground instructors and 
has been connected with the L Street 
bath, South Boston, for a number of 
years. He was down over Sunday 
and enjoyed a plunge in the surf at 
Singing Beach. 
New and attractive line of negli- 
gee shirts at Walt Bell’s Central 
Sq. adv. 
There will be an informal Equal 
Suffrage Conference at Mrs. Leach’s 
Manchester ‘Tea Room, Central St., 
on Tuesday morning, July 28, at 
eleven o'clock. Miss Stanwood, Mrs. 
Harry Russell and other members of 
the summer colony will be present, to 
help make plans and form a “summer 
committee,’ etc. All who are inter- 
ested in suffrage are cordially invited 
to attend. 
Singing Beach Brand Cod Fish at 
Swett’s Market. adv. 
G. E. WILLMONTON 
Attorney and 
Counselor at Law 
Friday, July 24, 1914. 
Mrs. Frank Bigwood entertained 
sixteen of her Chelsea lady friends 
Tuesday, together with seven of her 
Manchester friends. 
Mrs. D. T. Beaton and Mrs. Hattie 
Baker have been visiting Mr. and 
Mrs. A. L. Saben at their summer 
home in Winchester, N. H., the past 
week. 
Corduroy hats at E.:. vA. ‘Leth- 
bridge’s adv. 
The “Singing Be ach club” is. the 
latest of the summer “clubs” to an- 
nounce a dance. Tuesday evening, 
Aug. I1, is the date set, at the Town 
hall, Manchester. Long’s orchestra 
has been engaged. 
Bathing Suits for Men and Boys 
at Bell’s Beach Street Store. adv. 
Salmon Special today at Swett’s 
Market, at 25c. Ib. adv. 
Dr. Waldo H. Tyler moved his 
family to Beverly Farms yesterday, 
where he is to take the apartments of 
Dr. William J. Dougherty, who has 
been forced to give up his practice 
here on account of ill health. Dr. Ty- 
ler is a member of the Manchester 
School committee and his removal 
from town probably means there will 
be a vacancy in this office. 
Lamson & Hubbard Straw Hats at 
Bell’s Beach Street Store. adv. 
The dredging outfit has arrived and 
has already started the work of ad- 
ditional dredging in Manchester har- 
bor. Through special arrangement 
the channel to the pavilion at Tuck’s 
Point is being dredged. The work 
to be done this year on the main 
channel starts on the outer channel 
and works toward the Masconomo 
park. The same company is doing 
the dredging for the concern having 
the contract for the outlet in connec- 
tion with the sewerage system. That 
company has also arrived and begun 
operations. The work was started in 
the outer harbor the first of the week. 
The pipes are being put into the 
trench dug in the harbor 72 feet at 
a time. 
Salmon 
Market, at 25c. Ib. 
Special today at Swett’s 
adv. 
Is Stitt ONE 
The man who can’t remember when 
he was a fool, is one yet. 
WILLMONTON’S AGENCY 
Real Estate and Insurance of All Kinds 
School and Unian Sss., Manchester :-: Old ‘South Bidg., Boston 
BASEBALL NOTES. 
Manchester defeated the Salem 
Athletics last Saturday at the Brook 
street playgrounds. Grover, the left- 
handed twirler for the Manchester 
team, pitched a brilliant game. The 
score: 
123450750 0 me 
Manchester 004231501—16 14 3 
Salem Ath. OOOO}OITOO0O0—1 26 
Batteries—Grover and Collins for 
Manchester; Hagen and Boyle for 
Salem. 
The game tomorrow will be be- 
tween the Lyman Athletics of Bev- 
erly, which team defeated the local 
nine earlier in the season. 
The announcement of a series of 
games between Manchester and Bevy- 
erly Farms will be met with a great 
deal of interest by the fans. The se- 
ries will start on Saturday, August 
15, which is nearly a month earlier 
than last year, and therefore much 
more pleasing to both players and 
fans. The first game will be at Man- 
chester and the next at Beverly 
Farms. One of the stipulations of 
the agreement is that both clubs will 
submit a list of 15 names from which 
the teams from the series will be used. 
This will prevent both teams “ring- 
ing’ in men after the games are on. 
It is expected Manchester will have 
Craig Culbertson again this year. He 
pitched brilliant ball in the series last 
year. Grover will prove a great bul- 
wark for the Manchester team this 
year and will hold his own against 
any pitchers put up by the other side, 
with no exception. 
These games cost the local club 
about $40 every Saturday and it is 
therefore hoped the public will give 
generous support to the games by at- 
tending and donating their mite when 
the hat is passed. An effort is being 
made to form a “25 c.” club of 125 
members, which means that everyone 
in the club will chip in their 25¢ a 
week, whether they attend the game 
or not. A tag will be the designation 
that anyone belongs and thas paid his 
or her quarter. Tt is a good scheme 
and everybody should show their in- 
terest by joining when the opportuni- 
ty is presented. 
SUMMER HOUSE FOR 
RENT 
MORTGAGES - LOANS 
TEL. CONN. 
