NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
TOWN NOTICES, 
MANCHESTER. 
All bills and claims against the Town 
should be presented to the Selectmen on or 
before Wednesday of each week. After ap- 
proval the bills will be paid by the Town 
Treasurer, at his office, on the following Sat- 
urday. The regular business meeting of the 
Board, will be held on Thursday evening of 
each week at seven o’clock, also on the last 
Saturday afternoon of each month from one 
to four o’clock. ° 
FRED K. SWETT, 
EDWARD S. KNIGHT, 
WALTER R. BELL, 
Selectmen of Manchester 
Water Board Notice, 
The regular meeting of the WATER 
BOARD will be held at their office, in the 
Town Hall Building, on the last WEDNEs- 
DAY OF EACH MONTH, from 2 to 5 o’clock, 
p.M. All orders for shutting off or letting on 
of water, reports of leaks, and all business 
of the department under the Superintendent 
should be reported at his office at the Pump- 
ing Station. 
Per order, 
MANCHESTER WATER BOARD. 
Town Treasurer's Notice. 
The TOWN TREASURER will be at 
his office in the Town Hall Building, on Sat- 
urdays, for the payment of bills, from 1 
o’clock to 5 and from 7 to 8 o’clock P.M. 
When a holiday comes on Saturday the pay 
day will be Friday previous at the same 
hours. 
EDWIN P. STANLEY, 
Treasurer. 
Notice. 
The regular meetings of the SCHOOL 
COMMITTEE will be held the first Mon- 
day evening of each month at which time all 
bills against the school department of the 
town should be presented for approval. 
ALFRED C. NEEDHAM, 
Secretary. 
Notice. 
For the convenience of any person having 
business with the School Committee or Supt. 
of Schools, Mr. CHARLES E. FIsu, the Sup- 
erintendent, will be at the office of the 
School Committee, in the Town Hall Build- 
ing, Thursday afternoon of each week, from 
8.30 to 4.30 o’clock. 
SCHOOL COMMITTEE 
meled. 
WONDERLAND’S BIG SHOWS. 
The Indian Congress and Wild 
West, Fire and Flames and Other 
Bounteous Attractions. 
No one who has been fired by 
Remington’s drawing, “The Fight 
for the Water Hole,” should miss 
seeing “Wild Bill” Kennedy’s Wild 
West show and Indian congress at 
Wonderland, Revere Beach. When 
he sees it he will want to mount a 
pony and go careering across the 
plains, care free and soul untram- 
This show is the real thing 
without doubt. It occupies about 
five acres near the Shoot the Chutes 
and is circled by real tepees. It 
contains a track a quarter of a mile 
long, with a large, open’ space in 
the centre and a grand stand and 
bleachers capable of seating 2000 
people. The show itself runs every 
afternoon and evening at intervals 
of 30 minutes, from 3 o'clock until 
11, and while it lasts there is enough 
excitement and realism set loose to 
satisfy the most ardent and enthu- 
siastic admirer of the large, wild 
spirit of the west. 
This Indian congress and Wild 
West show is but one of many won- 
drous attractions at Wonderland. 
There is, for example, Fire and 
Flames, a marvelously realistic 
and soul-stirring reproduction of the 
conflagration in a city block, with 
firemen and fire engines to the res- 
cue, and all the attendant awe-in- 
spiring incidents of the real spec- 
tacle. Of equal merit and popu- 
larity are the mammoth Shoot the 
Chutes, the Descent to Hell Gate 
and the Under World, Thompson 
Scenic Railway, Ferari’s Trained 
Wild. Animal . Show, Princess 
Trixie, the wonderfully educated 
horse who, in point of intelligence, 
is emphatically an equine paradox, 
the Infant Incubators, a genuinely 
scientific, philanthropic, life-saving 
institution, Love’s Journey, an elec- 
trical illusion, in which anyone in 
the audience who sees fit may be- 
come a skeleton guest at a wedding 
feast, the Circle Swing, House of 
Follies, Whirl the Whirl, Hale’s 
Tours, the beautiful Orient and 
Japanese Village, to say nothing of 
the free Circus and countless other 
shows. Then, too, there is the Sa- 
lem Cadet Band, always a _ royal 
treat, and those other joys, the ball 
room and restaurant. 
The gates of Wonderland open 
every day at 1 o’clock, and Io cents 
is the price of admission. 
Jewelry of all kinds 
Winchester, Jeweler, 
182 Main street. 
repaired. 
Gloucester, 
* 
31 
DRaCY LTHOY ae 
Dentist, 
Announces to hisManchester patrons that 
he will be at his office, at 6 Union Stree} 
daily, from 9 to 5 o’clock. Telephone 148-3 
Telephone 4, 
MANCHESTER HOUSE 
M. J. CALLAHAN, Prop. 
Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. 
Stable with House. 
JAMES BETTENCOURT, 
All kinds of Ladies’ and TAILOR 
Gentlemen’s Garments 
Cleansed, Repaired, Dyed, Alterea, Pressed. 
Work called for and delivered. N.B. Have on hand 
a new and varied lot of Samples for Suitings. 
Central Street, 
Over Am. Express office. Manchester-by-the-Sea. 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
Undeveloped parcels of land from one to thirty acres 
Goed view of ocean. Great opportunity to buy for 
building purposes or investment. ORRIN A MAR 
TIN, Summer street, Manchester, Mass. 
LAMPRON’S 
Jobbing and Baggage Express, 
Furniture and Piano Mover. 
Removing Waste from Residences, 
18 Brook St., Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. 
Office, Pulsifer Block. Tel 94, 
HORACE STANDLEY, 
FLORSE-SHOER. 
Particular attention given to 
Jobbing and Repairing. 
Rubber Tires applied. Telephone 12-2, 
Depot Square, Manchester-by-the-Sea. 
J. P. LATIONS, 
CARRIAGE BUILLDER. 
STORAGE FOR CARRIAGES. 
CARRIAGE PAINTING. 
First-Class Work. SHOP, DEPOT SQUARE, 
MNANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA. 
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