oye NORT 
TRAVELERS VOTE UNANIMOUSLY 
That Travelers’ Checks are by far the most con- 
venient and safest way to carry money when 
Traveling. 
Easy to Carry. 
Easily Cashed. 
We sell at fifty cents per hundred dollars: 
American Bankers Travelers’ Checks. 
American Express Travelers’ Checks. 
Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne Travelers’ Checks. 
THE MANCHESTER TRUST COMPANY 
Banking hours 8:30-2:30; Sats. 8:30-1; Sat. Ev’gs 7-8 (deposits only) 
Payment can be stopped, if lost. 
RAYMOND C. ALLEN 
Assoc. Hem. Am. Soc. C. E. 
Member Boston Soc. C. E. 
CIVIL ENGINEER 
Investigations and Reports—Design and Superintendence of Con- 
struction—Design of Roads and Avenues—Surveys and Estimates. 
Established 1897 
LEE’S BLOCK, MANCHESTER 
TEL. 73-R and W 
WATCH REPAIRING 
How long is it since your watch was put in order? 
Are you 
forcing it to run on dry bearings, clogged with several years’ ac- 
cumulation of dust and grit? 
seriously injured. 
If you are, your watch is being 
If you have run your watch more than two years, it is time to 
have us put it in order. 
Satisfaction Guaranteed 
F. S. Thompson, sewever 
164 Main Street, Gloucester 
ales MAN who does not advertise 
is like the man in the dark with- 
out a lantern 
He knows where he is 
Nobody else does 
Enjoy His Groucu. 
“When a man has a grouch mo’ 
dan two days in succession,” said 
Uncle Eben, “let ’im alone.- Its his 
way of injoyin’ hisse’f.” 
No man is so ignorant that he 
can’t teach you something. 
The man who does not need to ex- 
plain anything to his wife is apt to be 
an uninteresting husband. 
H SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
MANCHESTER 
The pupils of the Story High 
school will present “Sally Lunn” in a 
two-act comedy in the Town hall, 
Friday, April 23. . 
Miss Katherine Walsh of Pine st. 
has been appointed superintendent o£ 
nurses of the new Everett Contagi- 
ous Hospital which is to be dedicated 
next month. Miss Walsh is a grad- 
uate of the Boston City Training 
School, class of 1914. | 
F. Clifford Rand has petitioned the © 
town authorities to extend sewer and 
water pipes to the lot on Lincoln ave., 
which he recently purchased. The 
town must take special action on this 
before the right can be given, and it 
may come up at the town meeting on 
Tuesday, Apr. 13. Mr. Rand pro- 
poses to build in the near future. 
Saturday afternoon, Apr. 3, at 
3.30 in the Chapel the Manchester 
Woman’s club will have their Chil- 
dren’s Day, when Miss Ethel Wood 
will entertain with her stories and 
dolls. Mrs. Wm. Hooper will be the 
hostess. Each member is entitled to 
bring all her. own children between 
the ages of five and sixteen, using 
her own calling cards; those having 
none between these ages may bring 
one child free, and as many more as 
they wish on the payment of the 
usual fee,—25 cents for each. 
GERTRUDE HoFFMANN AT KEI?rH’sS 
Gertrude Hoffmann, the most ver- 
satile artiste on the American stage, 
comes to B. F. Keith’s Theatre the 
week of April 5th for a positively 
limited engagement of one week 
only, in her new, 1915 edition of 
Gertrude Hoffmann’s New Revue. 
Miss Hoffmann is surrounded by a 
great company of fifty singers, 
dancers, pantomimists, comedians, 
acrobats, and the famous Hoffmann 
Bouquet of Beauties, as well as her 
great troupe of Arab acrobats. The 
New I915 edition of the Revue is in 
twelve scenes, with many new feat- 
ures, as well as “Zobedie’s Dream,”’ 
“The Blue Danube,” and “Pierrot at 
the Moulin Rouge.” Miss Hoffmann 
will present her great galaxy of imi- 
tations and caricatures of theatrical 
celebrities, including Anna Held, 
Ethel Barrymore, George M. Cohan, 
Isadora Duncan, Harry Lauder, and 
other equally famous artists. Miss 
Hoffmann and her New Revue are 
the greatest attraction in vaudeville 
today. The Revue runs over an hour, 
and is a veritable vaudeville show, 
musical comedy, pantomime, spec- 
tacle and dance carnival all rolled 
into one. 
