NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
THE BRITISH TAILORING COMPANY. 
SANDBERG & DONERT 
; HABIT MAKERS 
Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailoring. All classes of Work a Specialty 
Cleansing, Pressing, Dyeing, Remodelling 
Latest Patterns and Paris Fashion Styles. 
Guaranteed Satisfaction to All Customers. 
This is our second year here and a long list of satisfied customers is our best recommendation. 
Please notice the location: 
46 Beach St., Woodbury Building, Manchester, Mass. 
Telephone 179 
We Are Coming to Manchester 
beginning next week with our Automobile. 
We are going to save you lots of money on your weekly bill. 
What are 
you paying for best Vermont Butter? OUR PRICE IS 23c LB. 
All our goods are from 2 to 6c lower than your grocers and the quality is the best. 
Drop us a card and we will call. 
THE CREAMERY 
TRASK & HOPKINS 
222 Essex St., Salem 
224 Gabot St., Beverly 
SPRING CLEANING IS HERE 
Why not drop us a Postal to have one of 
our wagons call and take away the refuse 
that has accumulated. Old newspapers, 
books, magazines, cast off clothing, rubbers, 
rugs, old bottles, metals, etc., can be used 
in our work. Kindly help us and by so do- 
ing we will be able to help many. 
Salvation Army 
Industrial Home 
234 BRIDGE ST., SALEM, MASS. 
Our wagons ate lettered Salvation Army. 
Drivers wear a Cap with a Badge bearing 
same inscription. (15) 
OUR HOME PLAN 
Certainly top notches all the clothes 
cleansing propositions of the present day 
FIFTY PIECES 
of the soiled clothes of your family, 
provided they do not weigh over 
TWENTY-FIVE POUNDS 
are cleansed, dried and ironed RIGHT 
at the nominal price of 
SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS 
Stop and think what this means to you. 
THE SALEM LAUNDRY 
Telephone 1340 
“T don’t know what | am ever go- 
ing to do with that boy of mine. He 
is careless and absolutely reckless of 
consequences, and doesn’t seem to 
care for anyone.” 
“Good! You can make a taxicab- 
driver of him.” 
W HISPERINGS. 
Chief of Police Gorman of Man- 
chester did a little detective work last 
Sunday afternoon that drew an un- 
solicited compliment from the parties 
concerned. It seems that Henry J. 
Tracy of Salem, motored over to 
Lynn on Thursday of last week with 
his family to attend a reception at a 
Lynn hotel. When they were ready 
to go home, their auto had dis- 
appeared. It was found Saturday, 
having been abandoned at Wenham. 
In the meantime, notice had been sent 
broadcast to police of the state to 
look for the apprehension of the 
thief. It developed that a Lynn 
chauffeur, jumping his bond, had 
taken the auto to get out of town. 
Sunday afternoon, Chief Gorman 
saw a car approaching the square in 
Manchester, and thinking it was the 
car which had been stolen, he held it 
up and was about to put its occupant 
through the third degree when he 
found the driver was the owner of the 
car himself. Mr. Tracy afterwards 
told the clerks in Allen’s drug store 
that the Manchester police were al- 
right. Since getting his car back, he 
had driven all over Essex County and 
had been over the Revere Beach 
boulevard, passed hundreds of “cops,” 
but it remained for him to go to 
Manchester to be held up, and told 
he was riding in a “stolen” car. 
One good turn is apt to make us 
expect another. : 
A New Mark Sev By THE BREEZE. 
‘Today’s issue of the BREEzE is the 
largest in its career. Not only is the 
paper as large in its mechanical 
make-up as its busiest weeks last 
season, but there are more copies of 
the paper printed and circulated than | 
ever since the paper was started in 
May 1904. 
When we decided several weeks 
ago to get out this special Marble- 
head issue, we little dreamed of the 
demand that would be made on our 
advertising columns by the merchants 
in that part of the North Shore. The 
popularity of the BrrEzE coupled 
with the ability of our advertising 
man—-R. FE. Newman—has given us 
the largest paper we have ever pub- 
lished at this season of the year. In 
fact, not until July last year, did we 
reach the 60-page size. And when 
you think of it, a 60-page paper in 
this magazine form, is no small 
proposition. 
We believe the people of Manches- 
ter and the North Shore appreciate 
our efforts. Copies of today’s paper 
go to every large city in the United 
States—many of the copies sent as 
“sample,’ and hundreds to our regu- 
lar subscribers. We believe many of 
our friends and readers would be 
surprised 1f they knew just the work 
the BrEEzE is doing. There is hardly 
a summer cottager from Rockport 
and Ipswich to Nahant that does not 
take the BREEZE. 
There is but one inference: If you 
want to reach North Shore people 
patronize the medium _ that reaches 
them and that they: reach. The 
BREEZE in it magazine form is an at- 
tractive proposition—if we do say it. 
Let the BReEzE be your paper. 
We are here to serve: what can we 
do for you? 
And. while we are at it, let us 
suggest that the BrerzE plant is 
about the best equipped this side of 
Boston for handling nice job work— 
or anything in the printing line. 
Ours is not a mushroom growth: it 
is a healthy, steady growth. Our cyl- 
inder press, our linotype, our stitch- 
ing machine, our folding machine, our 
type—our entire equipment is NEW 
and UP-TO-DATE. We are always 
glad to show visitors about the plant. 
Come in and see us! 
Morrow — It makes me very un- 
easy if | owe a dollar to any one. | 
Borrow—Great Scott!— Hf I felt 
that way about it I’d have St. Vitus’ 
dance. 
Waste not fresh tears over old, 
griefs.— Euripides. 
