NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
The Manchester Trust Company 
Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. 
Capital $100,000.00 Surplus Account $30,000.00 
Open an account with your local Bank, and make. 
your August first, payments by Local Check. 
Leave a part of your month’s pay at 4 per-cent 
in the Interest Department, and make your Summer’s 
work count for something worth while. 
Banking hours 8:30-2:30; Sats. 8:30-1; 
Sat. Eves. (deposit only) 7-8 
RAYMOND C. ALLEN 
Assoc. Mem. 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 aad W 
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Pure Ice Cream is a Safe Children’s Food 
Fresh, rich, tested cream from our own Vermont creameries, 
the purest flavors and extracts and the highest quality 
cane sugar used in making 
Jersey Ice Cream 
combine to make one of the most deliciously wholesome foods 
your children can eat. Made under ideal conditions in New 
England's largest, cleanest and best equipped factory, Jersey Ice Cream 
is guaranteed pure—even better than the State and Federal Pure Food 
Laws demand. 
Teach your children to look for the Jersey Sign. 
At all leading druggists’ and confectioners*. By the plate or package. 
JERSEY ICE CREAM COMPANY, Lawrence, Mass. 
FOR SALE BY 
f ALFRED WALEN, Druggist, Manchester, Mass. | 
Agent: Beverly, Gloucester and Rockport 
MANCHESTER 
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Rogers are 
spending August at Yarmouth, N. S. 
Miss Elsie McCormack and Miss 
‘Tessie D’Entremont are at Middle 
East Pubnico, N. S., for their vaca- 
tion. 
Abraham Lampron, who sold his 
business here a week or two ago, in- 
tends to go to Bath, Maine, where he 
has employment in a paper mill. 
Mrs, Wm. C. Rust has _ received 
news of the death of her mother at 
her summer home, South Shore, 
Blackpool, England. She is survived 
by six daughters, one son and_ six 
grandchildren. 
The popularity of Singing Beach this 
summer is attested by the motors 
which one may find there any morning. 
especially on Sunday. Last Sunday 
about noon there were 54 cars lined 
along the street and 322 peple were 
accommodated at the town bath 
houses alone, to say nothing of the 
scores of private bath houses along the 
beach. 
Another near drowning accident 
was narrowly averted Wednesday at 
Singing Beach, thanks to the quick 
work of several young men, together 
with Caretaker Arthur U. McCor- 
mack. Miss Eva Boome of Lawrence, 
an employee at the Masconomo, went 
in bathing about 4 o’clock with others. 
The surf was fairly high and it is sup- 
posed the young woman was knocked 
over. At any rate she went under, 
Edward Coughlin of Boston, also em- 
ployed at the hotel was the first to 
note Miss Boome’s predicament. He 
rescued her together with Arthur Mc- 
Cormack, Lawrence Moore, George 
Brennan and Joseph Coogan. Dr. 
Blaisdell was summoned by telephone 
from the Masconomo and did what he 
could for the young woman, though 
the rescuing party had given the first 
aid before his arrival. 
This accident again calls attention 
to the urgent need of a telephone at 
the beach. Several complaints have 
been ade to the authorities, and the 
Isreeze has been asked by several who 
frequent the beach, including one of 
the sunmer residents, to point to the 
need of this improvement as a pre- 
caution. It was necessary for a run- 
ner to go to the Masconomo in order 
to telephone for a doctor, and at least 
ten minutes was lost thereby. Then, 
there is nothing at the beach in the line 
of blankets, or anything of this sort 
for an emergency. Nobody knows 
how soon it will be one of our imme- 
diate friends, a brother or sister, who 
will be the central figure in an emer- 
gency of this sort. The cost is slight, 
and by all means let us have a tele- 
phone at the beach, 
