eee 
7 agirers NOR T Hs SHO R ER (BOR E BZ E 
MANCHESTER. 
Miss Ruth Erickson is 
friends in Newton. 
Miss Anna Bingham of Boston, 
who is spending the summer in Man- 
chester, left today for a vacation 
trip to Nova Scotia. 
_ Miss Flossie Bradley is spend- 
ing her vacation with friends and 
relatives in Lawrence and_ other 
places of interest in that vicinity. 
Officer Leary is now on duty at 
Singing beach Sunday mornings to 
keep the automobiles and carriages 
in line. So many people go to Sing- 
ing beach Sunday mornings that 
there are at times fifty to sixty au- 
tomobiles and carriages in the space 
at the end of Beach street. It is 
with an idea of having some order 
that the officer is placed there. 
The preacher at the Baptist 
church, Sunday, both morning and 
evening, will be Rev. W. L. Smith 
of Merrimac. 
The annual picnic of the Baptist 
Bible school will be held at Tuck’s 
Point, next Tuesday, to which the 
congregation is invited. Barges will 
leave the church from 9 to 11.30 and 
returning will leave the grounds at 
4.30. Coffee will be furnished by 
the school. 
The young ladies of the Church 
Aid society of the Baptist church, 
are to hold a candy sale next Thurs- 
day evening, band concert night, on 
the Bingham property in Central 
square. ; 
Miss Alice Knight, supervisor of 
the Bridge street playground, Sa- 
lem, brought a large crowd of her 
young charges and their mothers to 
the Singing Beach, Manchester, to- 
day for an outing. The boys’ su- 
pervisor, with a number of boys, also 
accompanied the party. 
At the Congregational -church, 
Sunday morning, Rev. L. H. Ruge 
will preach on ‘‘Lost and Found.”’ 
Miss Lillian Snelling will render a 
vocal solo. In the evening there will 
be a vesper service. Musie will be 
rendered by the Mozart Ladies’ 
quartet of Boston. 
A ‘‘Lawn Festival’’ under the 
auspices of the Christian Endeavor 
society of the Congregational church 
will be held on the parsonage lawn 
next Wednesday, beginning at. 7 
p.m. Come and see the illuminated 
tree. Ice cream, cake, candy and 
useful and fancy articles will be on 
sale. There will also be amusements 
and music. The proceeds will be 
used to purchase some permanent 
memorial for the church to commem- 
orate the consecrated work of the 
children for the Kingdom of God. 
Visiting | 
‘package. 
Mrs. Sherman of 44 Central street, 
announces a great reduction in all 
millinery goods for the remainder of 
the season—inecluding hats and 
toques. Dar, 
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E. Coughlin 
leave. Monday for Fort Mulgrave, 
Canada, for a few weeks’ visit with 
Mrs. Coughlin’s mother. 
One of the Boston Post special 
writers was in town Tuesday pre- 
paring an article on the work of the 
Manchester Woman’s club in hav- 
ing some of its members take the 
children to the beach every day. 
The article will be illustrated and 
will appear in Sunday’s Post. 
The following ladies of the Man- 
chester Woman’s club will take the 
children to Singing beach for a day’s 
outing the coming week, meeting 
them at the postoffice: Monday, 
Aug. 7, Mrs. Otis Stanley, 9.30 a. m. ; 
‘Tuesday, Aug. 8, Mrs. Frank Rowe, 
1.30 p.m.; Wednesday, Aug. 9, Mrs. 
Wm. Joseph, 1.30 p.m.; Thursday, 
Aug. 10, Miss Beth Jewett, 1.30 p. 
m.; Friday, Aug. 11, Mrs. Frank 
Rand, 1.30 p.m. 
J. W. Cawthorne, Jr., is advertis- 
ing butter thins at nine cents per 
Two automobiles came together 
yesterday morning at the foot of 
Craft’s hill at the Cove. Robert 
Robertson, of Beverly, was going 
down ‘the hill toward Gloucester in 
his Cameron ear and A. C. Spring 
of the ‘‘Brambles,’’ West’ Glouces- 
ter, was coming up the hill from 
Ocean street. The cars collided and 
the two front wheels of the Robert- 
son car were smashed. Mr. Spring’s 
Packard was also slightly damaged. 
No one was hurt. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Ellis of Los 
Angeles, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. 
Geo. ©. Leach at the Leach cottage, 
Central street, over the last week- 
end. 
Fresh lot of butter thins at nine 
cents per package at J. W. Caw- 
thorne’s, 50 Central street. i 
Jos. Aveny of the ‘‘Stone Mill,’’ 
Elm street, passed away yesterday. 
Concert at Manchester, August 10, by 
Salem Cadet Band. 
1—March, ‘‘The Winning Fight’’ 
Holzmann 
9—Waltz, ‘‘The Pink Lady’’ Caryll 
3—Overture, ‘‘Poet and Peasant’’ 
Suppe 
4—Solo for Cornet, ‘‘The Volonteer’’ 
Rogers 
: Mr.: Nelson Bernier 
5—Selection, ‘‘ Martha’’ Flotow 
6—Campus Echoes—‘‘College Songs’’ 
eS ara Rollinson 
7—Selection, ‘“Naughty Marietta’’ 
Herbert 
Evans 
Verdi 
Fulton 
8—Selection, ‘‘Popular Songs’’ 
9 Selection, ‘‘Tl Trovatore’’ 
10—Mareh, ‘‘The Aviator’’ 
Postal Savings Bank to be Opened 
in Manchester. 
Manchester is one of the smaller 
towns in New England in which a 
Postal Savings bank is to be estab- 
lished. The postmaster general has 
issued orders for the opening of a 
department here on Friday, August 
25th. Changes are now being made 
in the front part of the postoffice to 
take care of the new business. 
Accounts may be opened and de- 
posits made by any person of the 
age of ten years or over in his or 
her name and by a married woman 
in her own name and free of inter- 
ference or control by her husband. 
No person can have more than one 
account at one time, 
Deposits will only be accepted 
from individuals and no account can 
be opened by or in the name of a 
corporation, society, firm or partner- 
ship. No person connected with the 
postoffice department or the postal 
service is permitted to disclose the 
name of a depositor or give any in- 
formation concerning an account ex- 
cept to the depositor himself, unless 
directed by the postmaster general.. 
Deposits are evidenced by postal 
savings certificates issued in denom- 
inations of $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50 
and $100, each bearing the name of 
the depositor, the number of the ac- 
count, the date issued, the name of 
the depository office, and the date on 
which interest begins. Only even 
dollars will be accepted and no ac- 
count can be less than $1 and must 
not exceed $500. 
In one calendar month no person 
can deposit more than $100. Sav- 
ings certificates can be transferred 
or negotiated and may be made pay- 
able only to the person to whom is- 
sued. 
In planning the postal savings de- 
positories, Postmaster Hitchcock did 
not forget the children. He has ar- 
ranged for the sale of postal savings 
ecards, which cost ten cents each. 
Upon these cards are pasted stamps, 
which the child ean buy for ten 
cents each. When nine stamps 
are on the ecard it will sum up to 
ninety cents, and the price of the 
ecard will make it $1. Then the hold- 
er of the ecard is privileged to ex- 
change it for $1 certificate and open 
an account. 
Geo. E. Willmonton and M. J. 
Callahan left on the 1.30 train today 
for a short trip to New York City. 
The two most engaging powers of © 
an author are to make new things ~ 
familiar and familiar things new. 
—Dr, Johnston, 
