BREEZE 
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— 
Give It to the Children 
You need never be afraid of giving Jersey Ice Cream to your 
children, for itis made to conform to every requirement of the Pure. 
Food Laws. Only the finest tested cream, from our own Vermont 
creameries, the best fruit flavors and extracts, and cane sugar, 
properly blended and frozen, makes 
Jersey Ice Cream 
the best ice cream sold in New England. Its delightful, creamy texture, smooth 
and well-flavored, is free from lumps, pieces of ice and salt. And you can always : 
rely on its goodness. Sold by leading druggists and confectioners. 
JERSEY ICE CREAM CO., - Lawrence, Mass. 
oESAUKEE 
( & WEDNESDAY, Sept. 20 
FROM 
MANCHESTER 
TaP.. “42,00 
SPECIAL TRAIN Leaves ai 
Including a delightful sail of nearly sixty miles on 
STEAMER 
Mount Washington 
There is no other spot in this vast vacation 
Jand that has more to commend it to the one 
day vacationist, and the tour of this peerless 
water sheet offers a panorama of mountains 
and lakes unequalled anywhere and the de- 
light of thousands annually. 
* Lunch Served on Board Steamer. 
Secure your Tickets early for the 
Nest Family Outing Trip of the Year 
{} } i .. Procure your tickets early from local ticket agent. 
Rai LROAD vu! Cc. M. BURT, General Passenger Agent. 
MANCHESTER. 
Horton Parker of Lynn, is visiting 
his grandmother, Mrs. John C. Elh- 
ott of Vine street. 
Miss Lorna Pinnock of Salem, was 
a guest of her friend Miss Abbie 
Floyd this week. 
Mrs. Elizabeth Bradshow leaves 
today for a visit with friends in 
Somerville, Nova Scotia. 
Writes of the ‘‘Singing Sand’’ of 
Manchester. 
Louis H. Stine of Aberdeen, Miss., 
was a recent visitor to Manchester, 
a guest of Albert Cunningham. Mr. 
Stine was much impressed with the 
North Shore, and Singing Beach 
held a special charm for him, for in 
the Aberdeen (Miss.) Examiner of 
recent issue we find the following 
above his signature: 
‘‘Manchester is a beautiful village 
by the sea, of 2,500 resident popula- 
tion, twenty-four miles down from 
Boston. The writer spent two hours 
the other day on its sandy shore. 
‘“‘The sand on the beach of Man- 
chester 1s endowed with a musical 
quality. Under the touch of one’s 
foot it gives forth musical sounds. 
At once the footman’s attention is 
arrested and he begins to listen to 
the songs of the sand. Under a 
stroke of his foot, aided by imagina- 
tion, the sand sings the ‘‘Star 
Spangled Banner’’; under a differ- 
ent stroke it responds with the mel- 
ody of ‘‘Dixie,’’ then ‘‘Hail Colum- 
bia,’’ and the ‘‘Old Oaken Bucket”’ 
will sing in one’s ear. Where the 
dry, pure sand found its music 
would be hard to answer. Where 
did the robin find his note? Any- 
way, the sand on this unique beach 
has its suecession of tunes; amidst 
the musie of the spheres the white 
sand on the beach at Manchester has 
its song. For ages it has been sing- 
ing its song that never grows dull 
and it is improbable it will ever lose 
its musical voice that is tuned to the 
harmony of the sea. There is only 
one other musical beach in the world 
and I believe it sings on a shore of 
Australia. 
‘Manchester is a luxurious sum- 
mering place for a great company 
of wealthy people who have royal 
cottages on this. singing shore. I 
venture to assert that enough men 
of wealth, place and power spend 
their summers in their silver palaces 
in Manchester to furnish nabobs for 
a state of 800,000 white population. 
~“T wish that all my friends in Ab- 
erdeen could listen for an afternoon 
to the musie of the Manchester 
ashore, ’? 
