30 
TOWN NOTICES 
MANCHESTER 
NOSE: 
All bills and claims against the Town 
should be presented to the Selectmen on or 
week. After 
approval the bills will be paid by the Town 
the following 
business meeting 
held on Thursday 
week at seven o'clock, al- 
before Wednesday of each 
Treasurer, at his office, on 
Saturday. The regular 
of the 
evening of each 
30ard, will be 
so on the last Saturday afternoon of each 
month from two to four o’ecloek. 
EDWARD S. KNIGHT, 
WALTER R. BELL, 
GEORGE L. ALLEN, 
Selectmen of Manchester. 
Water Board Notice 
WATER 
their office, in the 
Building, on the last Wednes- 
to 5 o'clock, 
All orders for shutting off or letting 
business 
of the department under the Superintendent 
office at the 
The regular meeting of the 
BOARD will be held at 
Town fall 
day of each 
ee ie 
on of water, reports of leaks, and all 
month, from 2 
should be reported at his 
Pumping Station. 
Per order, 
MANCHESTER WATER BOARD. 
Town Treasurer’s Notice 
TOWN TREASURER will be at 
Hall Building, on 
Saturdays, for the payment of bills, from 1 
to 5 and from 7 to 8 o’clock P. M. 
Saturday the 
pay day will be Friday previous at the same 
The 
his office in the Town 
o'clock 
When a holiday comes on 
hours. 
EDWIN P. STANLEY, 
Treasurer. 
The regular meetings of the SCHOOL 
held the first Mon- 
month at which time 
department of 
the town should be presented for approval. 
ALFRED C. NEEDHAM, 
Secretary. 
COMMITTEE will be 
day evening of each 
all bills against the school 
Notice 
For the convenience of any person hay- 
ing business with the School Committee or 
Supt. of Sehools, Mr. Charles E. Fish, 
the Superintendent, will be at the office 
of the School Committee, in the Town Hall 
Building, Thursday afternoon of each week, 
from 3.30 to 4.30 o’clock. 
SCHOOL COMMITTER. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
MANCHESTER 
_ Miss Ellen Bennett has gone to Dr. 
Channing’s Sanitarium, Brookline, for 
treatment. 
Miss Clara Sargent succeeds Miss 
Alice Haraden as chief operator at the 
local telephone exchange. 
Dances are coming thick and fast the 
rest of the summer. Among the latest 
planned is one by the “‘Shirtwaist 
Club,’’ to be held on Monday evening, 
July 20th. 
Frank J. Reid, local manager of Per- 
kins & Corliss’s garage, is receiving the 
sympathies of his friends in the death of 
his mother, Mrs. Francis Reid, who 
passed away at Lanesville the latter part 
of last week. 
Mrs. C. E. Fish and her mother, Mrs. 
Rowe, who has been here on an extend- 
ed visit, left Wednesday for Connecticut, 
Mrs. Rowe for her home, and Mrs. 
Fish for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. 
Alexander Campbell at New London. 
Magnolia lodge, I. O. O. F., have 
elected for the ensuing six months’ term 
Howard M. Stanley, noble grand; Fred 
K. Swett, vice grand; Charles Williams 
and Frank A. Rowe representatives to 
the grand lodge. The installation will 
probably be held next Thursday evening. 
A carriage belonging to James J. Nu- 
gent, Beverly Farms, and driven by Ar- 
thur Thomas of that place, was upset 
Sunday evening while turning the corner 
of Pine and Pleasant streets. “Chomas 
claimed that he did not known how the 
accident happened. One of the girls 
was driving and the first she knew they 
had swung the corner and the carriage 
turned completely over, breaking the 
shafts, but hurting no one. “The horse 
was quickly gotton out, the harness be- 
ing cut for that purpose, and Mr. Nu- 
gent was telephoned about the accident. 
Another carriage was sent over from the 
Farms and the crippled one towed home. 
The young ladies had gone on in an- 
other carriage sometime after the ac- 
cident. 
Sousa’s Band of Sixty-Five Pieces. 
Sousa’s Band is a rare. treat in_ itself, 
whether it consists of 40 or 50 pieces. 
Sousa will have exactly the same organi- 
zation he takes with him for his farewell 
tour of the world, visiting every civilized 
country on the globe, following the Bos- 
ton Food Fair engagement. Most elab- 
orate are the plans and preparations for 
the artistic decoration of the interior of 
the Park Square Coliseum. “The gene- 
ral color scheme will be blue and old 
gold. ‘The fair will be held from Sept. 
28 to Oct. 31. 
office, 
Monogram stationery at the BREEZE 
* 
B. S. BULLOCK 
Announces that he will open his 
Ice Cream 
Department 
May 25 
And will be Ready to 
Furnish Orders of any 
size at Short Notice 
MANCHESTER 
Monday, 
Washington St. - ~~ - 
Telephone 127 
——-For Sale by——_——_ 
GHAS. HOOPER, 
Manchester 
922 Or. Gh Pa. cn s1_6n_1%_ca_cM__a_F 
. KNIGHT'S EXPRESS } 
llanchester, Beverly 
4 Farms, Prides Cross- P 
: ing, Beverly and 
Salem, 
4 All orders left at Sheldon’s M’k’t., 
1 I. W. Floyd’s, G. W. Hooper’s, 
q Frank H. Dennis’, Bullock Bros’, 
B.S. Bullock’s, Manchester; or 
A, Standley’sand the Railroad sta- 
tion, Beverly Farms, 
promptly attended to. » 
> 
Agent Salem Steam Laundry. 
Also Star Wet Wash Laundry 
of Beverly 
P.O. BOX 83 TEL. CON, 
will be 
JUNK 
If you have junk of any sort to sell—we 
buy anything and everything—send us a 
postal and we will send a wagon at once. 
We pay in spot cash alX we can afford to 
allow. 
J. L. SIMON & CO., 
§24-11 10 Hardy St., Salem. 
Our wagon is in Manchester almost every 
day. 
Tel. 
