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EMMANUEL CHURCH, MANCHESTER- 
BY-THE-SEA. 
Services: Morning Prayer and 
Sermon at 11; Celebration of the 
Holy Communion tst and 3rd Sun- 
days in the month after Morning 
Prayer; 2nd Sundays at 8 a.m. 
Sacred Heart Church. 
Rev. Mark J. Sullivan, Pastor. 
Sunday Masses: 8.30 and 10.30 
a.m. Rosary and Benediction at 3.30 
p.m. Week-day Mass at the church 
at 7.30 a.m. : 
Orthodox Cong’] Church. 
Sunday morning worship at 10.45. 
Sunday school, 12m. Evening wor- 
ship, 7.00. Prayer meeting Tues- 
day, 7.30 
ie Baptist Church. 
Rev. Theodore L. Frost, Minister. 
Sunday morning worship at 10.45. 
Bible school, 12 m. BYPU, 6.00, in 
the vestry. Evening worship, 7.00. 
Prayer meetings Tuesday and Friday 
evenings, 7.30. 
Rev. T. L. Frost will preach at 
the Baptist church, Sunday morn- 
ing, on ‘‘The Resurrection Git’: 
and in the evening on ‘‘The Tal- 
ents.’ 
‘“‘The Greatest Sacrifice of All,’’ 
will be the subject of Rev. L. H. 
Ruge’s sermon at the Congrega- 
tional church Sunday morning. At 
the evening service his subject will 
be ‘‘Philip’s Experience 
maria.’’ 
The Ever Ready Circle of King’s 
Daughters will meet Monday eve- 
ning with Miss Lila Morse. 
Harmony Guild will meet at the 
chapel on Wednesday evening, June 
7th, to prepare for the Dutch Ker- 
mis. Every member please come. 
There will be no meeting on Monday 
evening. 
Remember the Dutch Kermis, at 
the chapel on Thursday ’ evening, 
June 8th. A Dutch tulip garden, 
Dutch kitchen, Dutch china, Dutch 
flower girls, Dutch windmill, will be 
among the many attractions. Doors 
open at 7:30. 
‘‘T suppose you find that a baby 
brightens up the house,’’ said a 
bachelor to a friend who was show- 
ing off the first baby. 
‘“Yes,’’ was the semi-sad reply, 
We burn twice the gas we used 
to!’ 
White Mountain Iee Cream 
Freezers at D. T. Beaton’s. * 
in Sa-’ 
Good Showing of New Bank. 
The Manchester Trust Co. makes 
a good showing in its statement of 
condition at the close of its first 
month of business, May 31st. It has 
resources of nearly quarter a mil- 
lion, or be exact $234,889.91, which 
is nearly $10,000 in excess of the 
stockholders’ responsibility. This 
is considered a remarkably good 
showing for the first month of ex- 
istence. 
The resources are: 
Mass. State Bonds $16,850.00 
Loans and Discounts 99,713.83 
Bonds 75,922.08 
Expense Account 681.91 
Other Assets 2,849.39 
Furniture and Fixtures 1,020.10 
Due from Reserve Banks 23,334.43 
Cash 14,518.17 
$234,889.91 
Liabilities 
Capital Stock $100,000.00 
Surplus 25,000.00 
Undivided Earnings 1,780.12 
Deposits 108,109.79 
$234,889.91 
Baseball. 
The usual crowd of baseball en- 
thusiasts witnessed the game of 
Saturday last at the playgrounds, 
Manchester. It was a close game 
and therefore all the more exciting. 
Both teams played well, and a 
marked improvement was notice- 
able in the Crickets. 
Crickets of Manchester. 
ab. r. bh. tb. po. a. e. 
Holland, ef, Sighs: Poti ee, reed 
Gillis, lf, ss, AL tO) LS. vied. 
Walsh, 1b, a ON ed 2 6) 
Walen, 3b, 3 fe al Pil See ea 
Gray, ss, 2. AA Pe! al Cae ee 
Hersey, 2b, ae Le Lise Oe oe O 
Stanley, rf, Do Lonel See ek ee) 
Rust, ¢, oe wOV TOTS alae) 
Slade, p, C Maer’ mere Rey eres” fae ee | 
Cool, lf, BT Aste Soe 
Total 35 14 1112 2710 5 
Broad St. A. A. of Salem. 
ab. r. bh. th. po. a. e. 
Murphy, 1b, Gye ee athe cater Cayeaediss (1 
Brawders, 3b, DRO al eo ea 
Comwell, ss, O02 8 Feo aes kD 
Flynn, lf, Be AAD POlSS Peo a 
McDonough, e, etc eS bak ea) 
Thornton, 2b, Diigo Ps Saal Reds Lk: 
Burke, rf, A 0 OO OD AO 
Cool, ef, Damo 6 304 O00 sae 
Sullivan, p, 32) le Dee 
Total 39 13 12 16 2413 4 
Score by innings: 
123456789 RHE 
Crickets dA FS A952 SLO expels 145 
Broad St. 044000302 1312 4 
Two-base hits — Holland, Comwell, 
Thorton, G. Cool, Sullivan; stolen bases— 
Holland 3, Walen, Gillis, Walsh 2, A. Cool 
2, Hersey, Stanley, Rust, Murphy, Com- 
well, Flynn, Thornton 2, Sullivan 2; 
Struck out by Slade 8, by Sullivan 7. 
Base on balls by Slade 9; by Sullivan 7. 
Hit by pitched ball by Slade 1. Umpire 
Davis. Time 2 hrs. 
The game on the morning of 
Memorial Day, Crickets vs. Peabody 
A. A., was a most remarkable one. 
It was an eleven inning game. Man- 
chester boys had everything their 
own way up to the fifth, when the 
score was 13-4 in Manchester’s fa- 
vor. By some timely hitting-and a 
bunch of errors Peabody made the 
score 13 to 11. ‘‘Thirteen’’ seemed 
to have Manchester’s goat in this 
instance, for in the 7th Peabody - 
forked over two more runs and tied 
the score, 13-18. Crocker then took 
A. Cool’s place in the pitcher’s box 
and held them down for four in- 
nings. In the 11th, with two out 
and Stanley on second, Rust placed 
a pretty hit a few feet over the 
third baseman’s head scoring Stan- 
ley with the winning run, the score 
being 14-13 in Manchester’s favor. 
Cool pitched a good game up to 
the 6th when he had a balloon as- 
cension, allowing seven runs and in 
the 7th, two more. And then 
Crocker and Holland buckled down 
and pinched the game for Manches- 
ter. Rust held down his position be- 
hind the bat very well the first of — 
the game. Altogether it was a good — 
game, and intensely exciting for the 
Manchester fans most of the time. 
‘‘Breeze’’ on Sale at North Station 
and on North Shore Trains. 
Beginning with today and con- 
tinuing throughout the summer, the 
‘‘Breeze’’ will be found for sale at — 
the North Station, Boston, late Fri- 
day afternoons and on Saturday and 
Sunday, and they will also be for 
sale on North Shore trains by news- — 
boys, as well as at every railroad 
newstand on the North Shore. If — 
you are unable to procure a copy of 
the ‘‘Breeze’’ at any time anywhere ~ 
let us know about it. The paper is — 
handled by the G. W. Armstrong z 
News Agency. 
‘ 
Manchester Public Library—New ‘ 
Books. * 
Anglo American Memories,| 
Smalley 920-S20 — 
Standard Library, Natural History, — 
(Well Illustrated) 5v. Ref. 
West in the East, Collier 915-0 
Fiction :— R 4 
Cousin Phillis, Gaskell JG248.6 — 
Flat Iron for a Farthing, Fi 
Ewing jE95.5@ 
Legacy, The, Watts W352.2 a 
Lob Lie-by-the Fire, Ewing j H95.6 
Members of the Family, r 4 
Wister W817.5 © 
People of Popham, Wemyss W466.2 
