26 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Sept. 29, 1916. 
A Strong Combination 
PERKINS & CORLISS 
Texaco Gasoline 
the power gas, that gives more motor miles and leaves your 
cylinders clean and bright. 
We are now agents for The Texas 
Company, producers of the purest petroleum products. 
Cadillac Cars 
new 1017 type 55, a refined and complete type of Cadillac with 
more power and nothing omitted. 
31,000 owners agree that a 
better car cannot be produced and the prices are rights—7-pas- 
senger touring car $2080; other style bodies in proportion. 
Hudson Super-Six 
with the best motor ever invented; total absence of vibration; 
quickest in the “get-away,” 
more road miles per hour as there 
is no delay; these cars never get in a pocket on the road as they 
can jump by any car made, without a jar. 
Ford Cars 
there have been a hundred makers of cars that were going to 
equal the Ford in price and service; no one has ever done so, and 
the new Ford is setting an even better pace. 
Kelly-Springfield Tires 
the big mileage, perfect satisfaction tires; you get all you pay for 
when buying Kelly-Springfield Tires. 
G. M. C. Trucks 
the truck that has put the profit in many construction and delivery 
propositions; the truck that always keeps at work. 
Look over the above list again. 
We are agents for all, and 
it is a strong combination selected from among the many good 
things we sell. 
Perkins & Corliss 
Gloucester, Mass. 
’Phone 200 
“KATINKA.” 
Only eight performances remain of 
that incomparable musical play ‘“Ka- 
tinka,” beginning next Monday, Oct. 
2, which concludes its Boston engage- 
ment at the Shubert theatre Saturday 
night, Oct. 7. Eminently entertain- 
ing, as any book and lyrics of Hauer- 
bach’s are bound to be, richly tuneful, 
as are all the works of Friml, and 
complete and colorful as Hammer- 
stein knows how to make any pro- 
Manchester, Mass. 
’Phone 290 
duction, the piece is easily the fore- 
most offering of its kind which Bos- 
ton has so far had the opportunity to 
see. That the public appreciates this 
fact is attested by the uniformly large 
houses which have greeted all the per- 
formances. And the success . of 
“Katinka” has been so emphatic that 
even the author’s predecessors, “High 
Jinks” and “The Firefly,” must be 
Al- 
“all-wool-and-a- 
reckoned as secondary triumphs. 
together, it is an 
TRAIN SCHEDULE 
Gloucester Branch, Boston & Maine. 
Summer Arrangement 1916. 
Leave Leave Arrive Leave Arrive Arrive 
Man. Bev.F. Boston Boston Bev, F. Man. 
6.24. 6.31 .7.21 || 545 654 7.01 
7.27 7.34 8.27 7.09 8.17 8.26 
7.56 8.03 8.47 8.17 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 11.38 12.35 $1.10 $1.56 s2.04 
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 4.33 5.21 5.30 6.18 6.25 
5.17 5.24 6.25 6.25 7.21 7.28 
6.40 647 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 
7.15 7.22 8.29 8.15 9.03 9.11 
8.36 8.43 9.30 10.00 10.51 10.59 
10.22 10.29 11.18 11.00 11.53 12.01 
1.29 1.36 2.27 12.40 1.30 1.38 
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 6.47 6.55 
7.56 8.03 8.52 7.10 8.05 8.13 
9.08 9.15 10.10 8.45 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 
8 p. m. 
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 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 *? 
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. Sundays, 9 a. m. to 12 m., and 
3 p. m. to 3.30 p. m. 
ELISHA PRIDE, P. M. 
yard-wide,” a regular “A-1” musical 
show that the Shubert is offering 
next week for the last times, with 
matinees Wednesday and Saturday at 
2.15 and evenings at 8.15. 
More people are spending their va- 
cations on National Forests this sum- 
mer than have ever done so before, 
many persons traveling long dis- 
tances by automobile in order to camp 
in these public playgrounds. 
