| ~ 
— 
Power! 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Pep!! 
Punchll 
This newest Overland Four has 
more power, pep, punch, and 
speed than any other low 
priced four or six cylinder 
car in the world. 
Try it and see. 
Perkins & Corliss 
Agents 
Gloucester, Phone 200 
31; 
Horsepower 
4 cylinder en bloc motor 
332” bore x 5” stroke 
‘g-inch tires, non-skid rear 
Cantilever rear springs 
Manchester, Phone 290 
°635 
f. 0. b. Toledo 
Roadster $620 
Streamline body 
Electric lights 
Electric starter 
Magnetic speedometer 
Model 75 B 
Complete epuipment 
“Sarah,” said her mistress during 
the dinner hour, “will you go down to 
the basement and get the catsup?” 
Sarah departed, and a few minutes 
later the family heard a great shooing 
and scampering of feet. 
ter Sarah came breathlessly into the 
dining-room and said to her astonish 
ed mistress, ‘“They’re up, mum.’ 
“What are-up?” “The cats, mum.” 
Youth's Companion. 
A Canadian teacher fell heir to an 
English estate of £20,000. In the 
lawyer’s office the clerks made bets 
as to how she would take it. One 
thought she would scream, two were 
of opinion she would burst into tears, 
two others favored hysterics. Her 
Shortly af-/ 
reply to the messenger was discon- 
certing: “I shall finish my monthly 
report, hear. these spelling errors, 
whip two boys and be at your office 
in forty minutes.”—Century. 
German Admiral—Kiss me, Kai- 
ser; I have made the Lion run! 
Kaiser—Splendid ! 
G. A. (panting very hard)—Yes— 
and he c-c-c-couldn’t catch me !—Lon- 
don Evening News. 
It was Tuesday morning. The 
clothes had been washed, dried, aad 
folded, and common sense pointed t9 
the fact that it was ironing day; but 
cautious Scandinavian Tillie, the nev 
maid, wished to make no mistake. 
TRAIN SCHEDULE 
Gloucester Branch, Boston & Maine. 
Summer Arrangement 1916. 
Leave Leave Arrive Leave Arrive Arrive 
Man. Bey.F. Boston Boston Bev, F, Man. 
6.24 631 7.21 || 545 6.54 7.01 
7.27 7.34 8.27 7.09 8.17 8,26 
7.56 8.03 8.47 S17 9.18 9.26 
8.35 8.42 9.32 9.35 10.24 10.32 
9.33 9.40 10.28 10.45 11.35 11.43 
10.36 10.44 11.36 12.40 1.28 1.35 
11.31, 11.388 12.35 $1.10 $1.56 82.04 
12.39 12.45 1.37 2.20 3.11 3.19 
1.33 1.39 2:32 3.15 4.05 4.12 ~ 
3.00 3.07 3.55 || 4.27 5.09 5.18 
83.46 83.53 54.43 || 5.02 5.55 6.04 
4.26 433 5.21 || 5.30 6.18 6.25 
D.17--5.24 6.25: ae egied ween 
6.40 6.47 7.40 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 
s Saturday only | s Saturday only 
SUNDAYS SUNDAYS 
715 7,22 8.29 8.15 9.03 9.11 
8.36 843 9.30 10.00 10.51 10,59 
10.22 10.29 11.18 11,00 11.53 12.01 
V2 A BGA mee 12.40 1.30 1,88 
2.31: 2:38" 3.29 2.15 3.05 3.13 
4.41 4.48 5.37 4.30 -5:19'—5.27 
6.23 6.30 7.19 6.00 647 6.55 
7.56. 8.03 8.52 10 8.05.7 2813 
9.08 9.15 10,10 845 9.36 9.44 
9.56 10.03 10.55 || 9.45 10.37 10.45 
MANCHESTER POSTOFFICE 
FRANK A. Foster, P. M. 
Office opens 6.30 a. m., closes 8 p. m. 
Holidays at 10.09 a. 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 7.24 p. m. 
For Gloucester: 10.10 a. m.; 2.47, 5.35 and 
oe Oe 
T'wo 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 P. O. 
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. Mm, 
From Beverly Farms, Manchester, 
Gloucester and Rockport, 6.50, 7.38, 11.42 
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, Glou- 
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. Sundays, 9 a. m. to 12 m., and 
3 p.m. to 3.30 p. m. 
ELISHA PRIDE, P. M. 
Before committing herself she said 
appealingly, “Meesis, I skuld like +o 
speak something.” “What is it Til- 
lie?” “Skal I cook some flat-iron ?” 
asked Tillie, earnestly. — Youth’s 
Companion. 
Is your husband fond of athletic 
sports ? ‘ 
Oh, yes, indeed. He just loves to 
sit in a shady grandstand and watch 
other people sweat.—Earchange. 
Tuly 21, 1916. | 
