24 
NORTH SHORE BREZZE 
March 9, 1917 
Established 1852 
Did you see them at the 
Boston Show ? 
A) 
mae 
— TT i : 
i 
GOLD STANDARD, HIGH-CLASS, BIG VALUE CARS AT LOW COST 
Perkins & Corliss 
North Shore Agents for Studebaker Cars 
Pleasure and Business Cars— List $850 to $1750 
See the Studebakers at our Gloucester and Manchester Salesrooms, 
1, 3 and 5 Middle St., Gloucester. 
The demand for 1917 Cars will exceed the supply. 
Let us know which car in the Boston Show pleased you most. 
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39 Beach St., Manchester 
Place your order now. 
We are agents for all of the best. 
UU - 
TRAIN SCHEDULE 
Gloucester Branch, Boston & Maine. 
Winter Arrangement 1916-17. 
Leave Leave Arrive Leave Arrive Arrive 
Man. Beyv.F. Boston Boston Bev, F. Man. 
6.24 6.31 7.21 || 540) 6.0407 .01 
7.28 7.35 8.27 || 7.09 8.17 8.26 
7.55 8.02 8.47 \| 8.17 9.18 9.26 
835 8.42 9.32 || 9.35 10.24 10.32 
9.33 9.40 10.28 || 10.45 11.36 11.44 
10.36 10.44 11.36 | 12.40 1.28 1.35 
P31. 38 12.35 | PAA es fal lS} ) 
12.39 12.45 1.37 || 8.15 4.05 4.12 
4.33* 1.39. 2.32“) * 4.27 5.09 5.18 
3.00 3.07 3.55 || 5.02 5.55 6.04 
4.26 4.33 5.21 \| §.30 6.18 6.25 
57. = 5.24" 6.29 || 6.255 7.215) 7.28 
6.40 647 740 || 7.15 8.05 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 
TS 7.22: 8:29 fir 8:15 9.03 9.11 
8.36 8.43 9.30 || 10.00 10.51 10.59 
10.22 10.29 11.17 || 11.00 11.53 12.01 
12.09 12.16 1.04 || 12.40 1.30 1.38 
1:52 1.59 2.50 | 215. 3805. 33 
3.58 4.05 4.54 || 4.30 5.19 5.27 
5.19 5.26 6.16 || 6.00 6.47 6.55 
6.42 649 7.41 || 7.10 8.05 8.13 
8.08 8.15 9.04 i 9.45 10.37 10.45 
9.56 10.03 10.55 || 
MANCHESTER POSTOFFICE 
Frank A. Foster, P. M. 
Office opens 6.30 a. m., closes 8 p. m. 
Holidays at 10.09 u. 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 6.12 p. m. 
For Gloucester: 10.10 a. m.; 2.47, 5.35 and 
B. F. Kerru’s THEATRE. 
A triple headliner will be offered at 
B. F. Keith’s Theatre the week of 
March 12, headed by Elizabeth Mur- 
ray ; James C. Carson and his “Models 
Abroad,” with a company of twenty 
people and beauty chorus of twelve; 
and James C. Morton & Co. in a 
comic travesty all his own. Miss 
Murray comes to Boston vaudeville 
direct from her tremendous personal 
hit in George M. Cohan’s Revue of 
1916, offering a series of brand-new 
dialect songs and stories. Miss Mur- 
Sup. I. 
Two mail deliveries to all parts of town 
daily; one noon delivery in central parts 
of town. Lobby open Sundays for mail 
in lock boxes: 9 a. m. to 11 a. m. 
PRIDE’s CROSSING ert: 
MAIL SCHEDULE. 
Mails due from Boston and way sta 
tions and all points beyond: 6.50, *9.13, 
11.32 a. m.; 3.07, 5.52 p. m. Sundays ‘9 
a. m. 
From Beverly Farms, Manchester, 
Gloucester and Rockport, 6.50, 7.38, 11.32 
a. m.; 1.43, 5.27 p. m. 
Mails close for Boston and way stations 
and all points beyond at 7.15, 10.15 a. m.; 
1,15, 5, *8.45 p.m. Sundays, *3.30 p. m. 
For Beverly Farms, Manchester, Glov: 
cester and Rockport, 6.30, 10.15 a. m., 
2.40, 5 p. m. 
*Not for registered mail. 
Office hours—Week-days, 6.30 a. m. to 
8.45 p. m. 
3 p. m. to 3.30 p. m. 
ELISHA PRIDE, P. M. 
Sundays, 9 a. m. to 12 m., and ~ 
| 
ray can sing a song as no other comed-_ 
ienne on the stage can do, and her act — 
is full of “pep” from start to finish. 
James B. Carson, the famous star of 
“The Red Heads,” whose “smell the 
ocean” is a by-word from coast to 
coast, will appear in a new musical 
= 
comedy, a sort of sequel to “The ¥ 
Red Heads,” entitled ‘The Models 
Abroad.” In this production, Jacob 
Kaufman takes his red-headed models 
abroad, and gets into all kinds of dif- + 
ficulties. The beautiful girls appear 
in many wonderful new Parisian 
gowns, and the act is brimful of good 
comedy and catchy songs and dances. — 
Boston THEATRE. 
William Farnum, the most popular 
of all the William Fox male stars, in 
his very newest six-part production, 
“A Tale of Two Cities,” adapted@ 
from the great novel by Charles 
Dickens, is the picture feature prom- 
at 
ised for the Boston Theatre the week — 
of March 12. 
sents no finer tale than the great Eng- 
lish writer’s story of the French revo- 
History or fiction pre~ — 
lution, and the, sacrifice of one man 
to save his rival’s life at the guillo- — 
tine, that the girl he loves may wed 
the man of her choice. ‘A Tale of 
Two Cities,” starring William Far- 
num, will be presented exclusively at 
the Boston Theatre for the first time 
in New England. 
