NORTHYSHORE BREEZE 
Someone said that 
The Dodge Brothers C ar 
WAS a 
Ford Car 
in a dress suit 
That is not an accurate statement. 
A true statement is 
that they are both absolute leaders in 
in their classes; that at the prices the 
Ford Car 
and the 
Dodge Brothers Car 
have no Equals. 
Each completely fills its place in the auto world 
We are agents for both 
Perkins & Corliss 
Gloucester, Mass. 
’Phone 200 
Manchester, Mass. 
*Phone 290 
Texaco gasoline gives more more miles and more power 
“Very Goop Epprr.” 
Last Saturday night completed the 
eighth week of that fascinating mu- 
sical comedy, “Very Good Eddie” at 
the Wilbur Theatre, Boston, and the 
eighth week has been but a repetition 
of the other seven as far as business 
is concerned, which is but 
way of saying that standing room 
only has been the rule after 8 o’clock 
each night. There is a subtile charm 
about “Very Good Eddie.” Other 
musical comedies have good music, 
pretty girls and funny comedians; 
but there is something else about this 
Comstock-Marbury production not 
y to define, but -very easy to feel. 
Light and frothy it may be, but that 
another — 
would not account for eight big 
weeks, starting in the heat of mid- 
summer, and keeping up such a big 
average business for three months. 
The music of the show plays no small 
part in its success, music of the popu- 
lar order, but not cheap ; music as care- 
fully notated as that of grand opera 
and with legitimate harmonies and 
cadences. Ragtime is almost wholly 
ignored, 
Ernest 
of the 
are those 
rather than 
methods 
farceur 
Truex’ 
trained 
the. antics of a clown, and his 
Coinpanions in merriment, Alice 
Dovey, Anna Orr, Florence Earl, 
Oscar Shaw, Denman Maley and the 
others, enter into the true spirit of the 
comedy. 
Oct. 13, 1916, 
ST SR MET SS 
TRAIN SCHEDULE 
| Gloucester Branch, Boston & Maine. 
Winter Arrangement 1916-17. 
Leave Arrive Arrive 
Boston Bev, F. Man. 
Leave Leave Arrive 
Man. Bev.F. Boston 
6.24 6.31 7.21 5.45 6.54 7.01° 
7.28 7.85 8.27 7.09 8.17 8.26 
7.55 8.02 8.47 8.17% 918 "9.26% 
8.35 842 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 ‘ 
11.31 11.38 12.35 2.20 3.11 3.19 
12.39 12.45 -1.37 3.15 4.05 4.12 
1.33 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 5.30 6.18 6.25 
5.17 5.24 6.25 6.25 47.21 7:28 
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 
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 11.17 11.00 11.53 12.01 
12.09 12.16 1.04 12.40 1.30 1.38 
152 1.59 2.50 2.15 3.05 3.13 
3.58 4.05 4,54 4.30 5.19 5.27 
5.19 5.26 6.16 6.00 647 6.55 
6442 649 7.41 7.10 8.05 8.13 
8.08 8.15 9.04 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 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 *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, Glou- 
cester and Rockport, 6.30, 10.15 a. m., 
2.40, 5 p. m. 
*Not for registered mail. i 
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.. 
A lady employing a colored man 
asked him his name. “Mah name is 
Poe, ma’am.” “Poe? Perhaps some 
of your family worked for Edgar 
Allan Poe.” The man’s eyes opened 
with great surprise. “Why,” he gasp- 
ed, pointing a dusky forefinger to him- 
self, “why, Ah am Edgar Allan Poe.” 
—Everybody’s Magazine. ; 
A postage stamp is on the tip of 
lany a man’s tongue who neyer talks 
about it. 
