NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Tur Turice-A-WeEEK Eprtrron 
Or THE 
New York Wor tp. 
This is a time of great events 
and you will want the news accurate- 
ly and promptly. The Democrats, for 
the first time in sixteen years, will have 
the Presidency and they will also con- 
trol both branches of Congress. The 
political news is sure to be of the most 
absorbing interest. 
_ There is a great war in the Old 
World, and you may read of the ex- 
tinction of the vast Turkish Empire in 
Europe, just as a few years ago you 
read how Spain lost her last foot of 
soil in America, after having ruled the 
empire of half the New World. 
The World long since established a 
record for impartiality, and anybody 
can afford its Thrice-a-Week edition, 
which comes every other day in the 
week, except Sunday. It will be of 
particular value to you now. The 
Thrice-a-Week World also abounds 
in other strong features, serial stories, 
humor, markets, cartoons; in fact 
everything that is to be found in a 
first class daily. 
THE THRICE -- A- WEEK 
WORLD’S regular subscription price 
is only $1.00 per year, and this pays 
for 156 papers. We offer this un- 
equalled newspaper and The North 
23 
Shore Breeze, together for one year 
for $2.25. 
The regular subscription price of 
the two papers is $3.00. 
A CHRISTMAS SUGGESTION. 
To your friend who enjoys good 
reading you can make no better or 
more acceptable Christmas gift than 
a subscription to the Boston Evening 
‘Transcript. 
The publishers have issued a neatly 
engraved subscription certificate to be 
be given to those ordering the paper 
as a holiday offering, which may be 
sent by mail to reach the recipient 
at Christmas time. 
Free sample copies and rates will be 
cheerfully furnished by the Boston 
Transcript Co., Boston, Mass. 
Willing to Thing Of It. 
Pat was a bashful lover; and Biddy 
was coy, but not too coy. 
“Biddy,” Pat began timidly, “did yer 
iver think or marryin’?” 
‘Sure, now, th’ subject has niver in- 
terred mee thoughts,’ demurely re- 
plied Biddy. 
“Tt’s sorry Oi am,” said Pat, turn- 
ing away. 
“Wan minute, Pat!’ called Biddy, 
softly. “Ye’ve set me thinkin’ ”’— 
Harper's Bazaar. 
EEE is cao ie doa sane 
SALEM MASS. 
(‘yy The Store of 
B. F. Kerru’s THEATRE. 
Something decidedly novel in the 
way of vaudeville productions is an- 
nounced for B. F. Keith’s Theatre 
next week in Jesse L. Lasky’s oper- 
ette, “In The Barracks.” This is a 
one-act military comic opera from the 
German, translated by Cecil DeMille, 
and Grant Stewart, with musical score 
by Robert Hood Bowers. With its 
scene laid in the barracks of the 
Royal Prussian Huzzars in an old 
castle near Berlin, the story affords 
exceptional opportunity for elaborate 
scenic and costume effects. The com- 
pany is a large one. 
Edwin Ford and his big dancing 
carnival will be still another spectacu- 
lar feature of the week. Other big 
features of the bill will be Mack and 
Orth in their musical oddity, “The 
Wrong Hero;” Belle Story, the sing- 
ing comedienne; Dolan and Lenharr 
in “Almost a Mind Reader ;” Kitty 
Trancy and her trained horses and 
dogs; and Conrad and Whidden, two 
new-comers from the West. _ 
When a man pays his wife’s bills 
without grumbling her astonishment 
at his generosity is only equalled by 
her suspicion as to what he has been 
doing. 
a 
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Christmas Plenty 
@. 
se 
w TWO GOOD THINGS TO DO 
Shop as early as you can | 
PROMOS SOE SOE HORE HOO 
fey. If you do 
The old-time Christmas crowds are here and growing denser every day 
Webber Store never looked better—Stocks were never more attractively dis- 
played— Salespeople are alert, courteous and eager to serve—Prices are nowhere 
lower Quality for Quality—Variety is nowhere broader; while the Webber 
stamp on merchandise marks the pure gold of reliability. 
rr 
———————————————————— 
your XMAS SHOPPING at WEBBER’S <“ se 
See 
SOOO EERE 
Yowll be Satisfied 
est 
Shop in Salem 
The 
eect ee tte 
