From The Concord Enterprise, 15 September 1888 - Maynard: Miss Hannah L. Sweeney has been spending the past two weeks in Abington; Will H. Gutteridge is taking his vacation in Conway, N. H.; Michael Mahoney, deceased; Miss Laura Woodart taking Miss Cora Cheney's place at Persons' music store during her vacation; a crowd of Italians were in town Sunday looking for a conflict; John Doyle is clearing woods on the line for the water pipe from White pond. Acton Center: Will Noyes is selling produce in Boston; Herman Tuttle started for Philadelphia to go to school; Wm. D. Tuttle's new wind mill is almost as high as the monument; Nathan Johnson has the carrying of the high school scholars from here to West Acton; Charles B. Worthley has gone to Marshfield to attend the cattle show, and he will no doubt visit the home of the late Daniel Webster there. South Acton: Miss C. A. Allen and Tessie Smith are visiting at Lawrence; Wm. Fletcher shot four crows and five grey squirrels; a letter writer asks what has become of the committee appointed at the last town meeting of Acton, to collect money to pay Messrs. Brooks and Pike, two soldiers who are entitled to the bounty by reason of re-enlistment. Sudbury: Mr. Wm. Goodnow and wife have been rambling among the N. H. hills; Mrs. Jane Merriam of Cambridge baits her own hook; exploding rocks in the cemetery; Miss Clara Whitehill visited at her grandfather's, Mr. G. Parmenter; clothing can be dropped off at G. W. Hunt's store to go to the Maynard laundry every Tuesday, and returned the following Friday. See http://www.rootsweb.com/~mamidnws/1888/SEP.html#15 for details of these and more. The complete run of The Concord Enterprise is available on microfilm at the Acton Memorial Library. See http://actonmemoriallibrary.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Dennis Ahern | Middlesex County Massachusetts Newspaper Abstracts Acton, Massachusetts | http://www.rootsweb.com/~mamidnws/index.html - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -