NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Perkins & Corliss, AGENTS 
Manchester, Mass. 
, Ie 
THE UNIVERSAL CaR : 
The Ford Sedan carries all the up-to-the-minute 
style and beauty in design, with sumptuous lux- 
ury in appointments—decidedly a car of quality 
for service every day of the year, giving modern 
luxury with Ford Economy, both in purchase 
price and maintenance. 
The Ford Sedan meets all the demands of social 
life, theatre, shopping and pleasure riding— 
equally delightful in sunny or inclement weather 
—a car of luxurious comfort and class. 
The regular Ford chassis of Vanadium steel con- 
struction. The simplicity, ease and safety of 
contro] makes this car very desirable to women 
who drive their own cars. 
Ford Sedan $975; Coupelet $750; Town Car 
$690; Touring Car $490; Runabout $440. All 
fully equipped, f.o.b. Detroit. 
On display and sale at Perkins & Corliss. 
Buyers will share in profits if we sell at retail 300,000 
new Ford cars between August 1914 and August 1915 
wV3.3.0eOoaooenannwwownaonaoa®@>»>=$=sma9aoaMaoapa>$._“Q“VQVY“O“WS_nn 
VALESKA SURRATT AT B. F. Kerty’s 
Valeska Surratt, the late star of 
“The Red Rose,” “Belle of the 
Boulevards,” “Bouffe Varieties,” and 
other big musical comedies, and the 
most gorgeously gowned woman on 
the American stage, will come to B. 
F. Keith’s Theatre the week of Feb. 1, 
at the head of a splendid vaudeville 
bill. Miss Surratt will offer her spec- 
tacular dancing revue, “Black Crepe 
and Diamonds,” a wonderfully staged 
affair, with sensational dancing, sing- 
ing, tangoing, and gorgeousness run 
riot. Miss Surratt has expended 
thousands of dollars upon her pro- 
duction. It is by far the most beauti- 
ful and expensive offering of its kind 
ever staged. Miss Surratt will be as- 
sisted by a large company of expert 
dancers. The surrounding bill in- 
cludes George Rolland and his com- 
pany, including that funny little as- 
sistant, “Mike,” in the merry one-act 
farce, “Fixing the Furnace.” 
The Sihlwald, or city forest of 
Zurich, Switzerland, adds to the 
town’s revenues $7.20 per acre a year, 
reducting the amount needed to be 
raised through taxation by more .than 
$32,000. 
It takes two to make a quarrel, and 
we seldom have any difficulty in find- 
ing the other one, 
TRAIN SCHEDULE 
Gloucester Branch, Boston & Maine. 
Winter Arrangement 1914-15. 
Leave Leave Arrive Leave Arrive Arrive 
Man. Bev. F. Bestes Besien Bev, fF, Man. 
6.24- 6:31 ‘7-21 5.50 6.54 7.01 
7.27 7.34 8.27 7.09 8.17 8.26 
7.56 8.03 8.47 8.17 9.18 9.26 
8.35 8.42 9.32 9.35 10.24 10.32 
9.33 9.40 10.25 10.45 11.35 11.43 
10.40 10.48 11.40 || 12.40 1.28 1.35 
11.381 13,38) 12.35 2.20 3.09 3.17 
12.39 12.45 1.37 3:15. 4.05 4,192 
1.33) 3927 232 4.27 5.09 5.18 
300 oslo, 4.00 5.02 5.55 6.04 
4.26 4.33 5.21 5.28 6.16 6.22 
S17 «66.24 6:25 6.20) 7.15) 7.22 
6.40 6.47 7.40 LS 8205 8.12 
9.05 9.12 10.09 9.15 10.16 10.24 
10.22 10.29 11.16 || 11.25 12.10 12.16 
SUNDAYS SUNDAYS 
(clommince 8.29 8.15 9.02 9.10 
8.36 8.43 9.30 10.00 10.51 10.59 
10.22 10.29 11.17 11,00 11.53: 12,01 
12.11 12.18 1.06 12.40 1.30 1.38 
152. 1.59 2.50 reapiles” CRYO RIS 
3.58 4.05 4.54 4.30 5.19 5.27 
5.20 5.27 6.16 ||° 6.00 6.47 6.55 
6.42 6.49 7.41 7.10 8.05 8.13 
8.08 8.15 9.04 © 9.45 10.37 10.45 
9.56 10.03 10.55 
MANCHESTER FIRE ALARM BOXES 
31 Corner Sea and Washington sts. 
33 Telephone Exchange Office. 
34 Summer Street, P. H. Boyle’s Stable. 
41 Corner Bridge and Pine sts. 
43 Corner Harbor and Bridge sts. 
52 Fire Engine house, School st. 
54 Corner School and Lincoln sts. 
56 School Street, opposite the grounds of 
the Essex County elub. 
61 Sea Street, H. S. Chase’s house. 
62 Corner Beach and Masconomo. 
64, ‘‘Lobster Cove.’’ 
Two blasts, all out or under control. 
Three blasts, extra call. 
Direction for giving an alarm: Break 
the glass, turn the key and open the door, 
pull the hook down once and let go. 
JAMES HOARE, Chief, 
THOMAS BAKER, 
CLARENCE W. MORGAN, 
Engineers of Fire Department. 
MANCHESTER POSTOFFICE 
Sami. L. WHeEaton, P. M. 
Office opens 6.30 a. m., closes 8 p. m. 
Holidays at 10.09 a. m. Money orders 
sent to all parts of the world; window 
open 7 a. m. to 7 p. m. 
Mails close for Boston, north, east, 
south and west: 7.02 and 10.10 a. m.; 1.05, 
4.51 and 7.55 p.m. Sundays at 7.24 p. m. 
For Gloucester, Rockport and Magnolia: 
10.10 a. m.; 2.47, 5.85 and 8 p. m. 
Two mail deliveries to all parts of town 
daily; one noon delivery in central parts 
of town. 
Some people believe in contrasts, 
but no man can have a light heart 
and a dark brown taste at the same 
time. 
A girl is real proud when she grad- 
uates from college with a B. A. But 
she is even prouder when she enters 
the school of matrimony and adds B 
Y to her degree, 
