NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
6 
Society Motes MANCHESTER 
R George Steward and family of New- 
Pee ety Bee ee ee 2 buryport have moved into the tenement 
Manchester, the end of this Pe ae a deen the David Fenton house, Beach street, 
are sailing for Europe on December 1. 
‘They will be abroad three months, intend- 
ing toarrive in New York on the return 
about March 1, whence they will go to 
thier Beacon street house for the balance 
of the winter. 
Robert ‘Treat Paine, 2d, of Manches- 
ter and Brookline, has sold. through Hol- 
lis Burgess his schoanci: ‘Barbara,’ mae 
Aug. P. Loring. She will be made an 
auxiliary. 
Among the bebutantes of the season, 
whose coming out will be of particular 
interest to North Shore folk, is Miss 
Leslie Bradley, daughter. of Mrs. Robert 
Stow Bradley of Pride’s Crossing. She 
will be introduced at a reception at the 
Somerset the second week in December. 
Among the last to leave the North 
Shore are the Ernest Jacksons who return- 
ed to their Beacon street home, from 
Prides Crossing, Thursday. 
Miss Jessie Colby and her sister, Miss 
Mary Colgate Colby, who closed the 
Arthur Little cottage, Cabot Lane, 
Beverly Farms, last week, have been 
spending the past week in Boston, stop- 
ping at the Hotel Touraine, before re- 
turning to their home in Madison Square, 
New York, for the winter. 
Why not have your printing done at 
the office of THE Breeze Print? 
NOTICE! 
Wednesday Evening Club. 
Tickets (fifty cents each) for the series of 
Six Entertainments will be on sale at the 
Congregational Chapel, 
Wednesday Even’ g, Dec. 5, at 8 o’ clock 
Those desiring may order in advance, giv- 
ing their names by mail orin interview with 
the secretary. Membership tickets are issued 
to persons over 16 years of age, to be non 
transferable, and the number is of necessity 
limited. 
ALBERT CUNNINGHAM, Secy. 
Manchester, Noy. 22, 1906. 
this week. Mr. Steward is employed by 
E. A. Lane, the painter. 
Miss Dorothy Blaisdell was hostess at 
alittle party given at her home on Union 
street Monday evening on the occasion 
of her eleventh birthday. Her guests 
were: Edith and Helen Fish, Gwendolyn 
Glendenning, Helen Wing, John Carter, 
Roland Knight and Francis Andrew. 
John McKenzie, driver for B. S. Bul- 
lock the past season, concluded his work 
Saturday last and has a position in Lynn 
for the winter. 
Mrs. Isabelle Stidstone, who has been 
treated at the Beverly Hospital for the past 
six or seven weeks, arrived home last 
week ‘Thursday much improved, so 
that she is now able to be out and among 
her friends again. 
Special Offer:—The Breeze from 
now until January 1, 1908, for $1.00. 
Grand Jury Case Discharged. 
George Jackson, formerly head-waiter 
at the Masconomo House, Manchester, 
who was held in $500 for appearance be- 
fore the grand jury on Aug. 27, for al- 
leged larcency of $190 from John J. 
Ritchie, a guest atthe house, was dis- 
charged from the Salem jail Saturday, the 
grand jury not having found any billa- 
against him. His discharge was ordered 
by Dist. Atty. Peters. 
Jackson was the hero of a sensational 
attempt to escape at the time he was 
committed. He was being taken from 
the court house to the jail by Chief Pea- 
body, when he made a dash for liberty. 
The chief was not quite so alert as the 
prisoner at running. ‘The latter hid in 
a cellar where he was afterward found 
by the officers. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick R. Tibbitts of 
Manchester and Boston, who spent last 
winter at the Hotel Somerset, have taken 
a house for the winter at 96 Bay State 
Road, Boston. 
Something for the SCHOOL CHILDREN. 
$2500 for 500 bright school boys and girls is the striking offer of the Boston 
Globe to those who send in the best solutions of the historical problem pictures now 
running in the Daily Globe. 
Only the most famous things in American history 
will be pictured, things that are taught in all the schools. 
Only school boys and girls may compete for the awards, although boys and girls 
are entitled to receive any assistance they may need from parents, teachers, 
Contestants may begin at any time by sending to the Globe for back num- 
anyone. 
bers, from the beginning of the contest. 
or from 
See the Globe at once and read the conditions of this interesting educational 
contest. 
history of their country. 
It will sharpen the wits of the children and help them to remember the 
The Sunday Globe is giving away a moving toy for the children and free piano 
lessons, and George Ade is writing over, in his funniest vein, 
as Pocahontas, Maud Muller and the like. 
the Boston Daily and Sunday Globe. 
such famous stories 
For winter reading there is no equal to 
WANTED 
Experienced Lady Stenographers, $6.00 to 
$8.00 a week. 
Domestics. Three Reliable Young Men. 
General help of all kinds. 
Beverly and No. Shore Emp’ m’t Bureau, 
11-17-8244 Cabot St., BEVERLY. 
GEO. P. CARVER, 
CIVIL ENGINEER 
184 Cabot St., Beverly, Mass, 
11-17-52 Telephone 24-12 
Thanksgiving 
You will doubtless entertain 
some of your friends next 
Thursday. Don’t you need 
a carving set? It means a 
great improvement to your 
table. 
Perhaps it’s a new set of 
knives and forks, teaspoons, or 
something of the sort; a set of 
bread and _ butter planer we 
have them all in stock and at 
prices that will appeal to you. 
Baird-North Chae 
250 Essex St., 
SALEM, MASS. 
Where the stock is practically 
unlimited, and where the 
prices are low. 
