WGN Bim o tT ORF “BREEZE 
23 
Suppose you were a tire dealer. Suppose, after experiment- 
ing with the various brands of tires on the market, you 
found one certain brand that rarely gave a customer cause 
to come back with a complaint—a tire manufactured by 
America’s representative tire concern—made by a co- 
operative method of manufacture, whereby the strongest 
points of four famous brands were incorporated into 
this one tire. 
Wouldn’t you consider it good business to sell and 
recommend such a tire? 
answer this description exactly. We heartily recommend 
these tires to our customers because we know we are giving 
them the utmost tire value and the most certain protec- 
tion against trouble they can possibly get for their money. 
Cost no more than you are asked to pay for other kinds. 
THOMAS D. CONNOLLY, 2nd 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
How would you run a Tire Business? 
United States Tires 
TRADE-IN-SALEM CAMPAIGN 
The united movement by the Salem 
merchants in the line of a T'rade-in- 
Salem campaign is proving a great 
success. The merchants are offering 
free cars on the suburban electric 
lines and free return tickets on the 
railroad lines and as an extra induce- 
ment an unusual offering of fall and 
winter goods at attractive prices. So 
popular has this unique advertising 
campaign been the past week, it is to 
be continued next week on Tuesday, 
Thursday and Friday. 
Everybody reads the Breeze. 
New York HIpPpoDROME 
The news of the great success of 
“America” at the Hippodrome has 
swept through the country and the 
box office is constantly in receipt of 
orders for theatre parties from all 
points of the compass. In this year’s 
spectacle the transitions from scene 
to scene in different parts of our 
country, through sunset and a mo- 
ment’s darkness, are uniformly stc- 
cessful, and the scenery is gorgeous. 
The Culebra Cut in the tru light of 
the hour before dawn in the  sub- 
tropic, is filled with atmosphere; the 
first steamer to pass through the 
First Class Groceries and Kitchen 
Furnishings 
Pp, §. Lycett Magnolia Avenue, Magnolia 
canal is a full-edged ocean liner, with 
four funnels, her portholes aflame 
with electric lights. The great Na- 
tional Reservation in Wyoming, Mon- 
tana and Idaho; the Pueblo village, 
and the Grand Canyon of the Colo- 
rado are no less beautiful under their 
increasing lighting. This is, indeed, 
“seeing America first” and seeing it 
beautiful. Truth to tell, the further 
we get away from New York the 
more beautiful America grows. Still, 
in the lower East Side scene there is 
remarkable crowded realism and an 
admirable handling of masses. The 
mad dash of a fire chief, an engine, a 
hose cart and a hook and ladder wa- 
gon for a fire is still another demon- 
stration of the huge size of the Hip- 
podrome stage. 
Mrs, H. G. Curry is entertaining 
her son, William Curry of Pittsburg, 
at her summer home at Magnolia. 
Everybody reads the Breeze. 
