P.O. Box 129 
“Mt. Pleasant Dairy 
R. & L. BAKER, 
Deatersin ¢ # MILK 
Telephone Connection 
Teaming done to order. 
Gravel and Rough Stone. 
MANCHESTER, ~- MASS. 
EDWARD A. LANE 
2% HOUSE, SIGN AND CARRIAGE PAINTER 2% 
DECORATOR AND PAPER HANGER 
Dealer in Paints, Oils, Paper Hangings, Win- 
dow Shades, Blinds and Windows. 
Tel. Con. MANCHESTER AND HAMILTON 
Cc. L. CRAFTS. 
CARPENTER AND BUILDER 
Special Attention Given to Jobbing. 
MANCHESTER, - : - MASS. 
Telephone 139-4. 
George 5. Sinnicks, 
MASON BUILDER 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA., 
EDWARD 8S. KNIGHT, 
FLORIST 
Dealey in fine plants, bulbs and seeds. 
FLOWERS forall occasions. 
44 SCHOOL STREET, - - - MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA. 
Manchester, Magnolia, Beverly Farms, Boston 
s 5 2 
Smith’s Express Company 
F. J. Merritt, Proprietor. 
Principal Boston Office: 32 Court Square. 
Telephones: Boston, Main 489; Manchester 11-5 
FIRST-CLASS STORAGE FOR FURNITURE. 
SEPARATE ROOMS UNDER LOCK 
MANCHESTER - . 
Removal of Night Soil 
Application for the removal of the con- 
tents ofcesspools and grease traps should 
be made to S. ALBERT SINNICKS, 
Per order the Board of Health 
FRANK H. DENNIS 
= GROCER 
Telephone 24-3 
16 School St., - Manchester 
INSURANCE 
Any Kind, 
fe ©ickveb: sort ROPLE 
GENERAL MANAGER 
Gloucester or Manchester 
MASS. 
Anywhere, Any Amount. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
New England Food Fair, Mechanics 
Building, Boston, Opens October 5. 
Some wise man once declared that 
facts were stubborn things. Certainly 
they are realities and have got to be reck- 
oned with in all sorts of endeavors, great 
or small, through life. Sometimes facts 
are decidedly pleasant; again they are of 
a disagreeable sort and grate harshly up- 
on one’s sensibilities. 
Here are some facts regarding Mech- 
anics Building, Boston, one of the larg 
est exposition buildings in America. In 
this building will be held from October 
5 to October 31, the greatest food fair 
ever held in America. It will contain 
the greatest number of exhibitors. It 
will also have the greatest number of at- 
tractions, at a cost of over $100,000, or 
over five times more than the total cost 
of any previous food fair held in Boston. 
The Mexican National Band alone is 
twice the size of, and will cost double 
that spent for any musical attra€tions at 
any previous food fair or exposition held 
in Boston. Were it not a government 
band, and the salaries of its members 
paid by the Republic of Mexico, its ex- 
pense would be prohibitive. But it is 
sent to the New England Food Fair at 
Mechanics Building with the personal 
compliments and greetings of President 
Diaz. The average daily expense of 
these ninety-seven talented musicians 
while in Boston will be $1450. 
The expense to produce the Frank C. 
Bostock Consolidated Trained Wild Ani- 
mal Arena, a combination of the Bostock 
shows from Earl’s Court, London, Eng- 
land, and from Bostock’s Dreamland, 
Coney Island, N. Y., and the feeding 
of the 500 animals, will be over $1200 
per day. 
All of these attractions, with a host of 
others, are free to all who visit Mechanics 
Building during the month of the pro- 
gress of the New England Food Fair 
which opens Monday night, October 5. 
7th Boston Food Fair Now Open. 
The 7th and greatest Boston Food 
Fair is now open, and the Boston Retail 
Grocers’ Association, who have success- 
fully run six other fairs in this city, have 
certainly cause for pride in the result of 
their past year’s preparations, which 
have consummated in the veritable Fairy- 
land into which the efforts of M. A. 
Singer of New York-—who has been the 
architect and decorator—-have turned the 
Park Square Coliseum, where the Fair is 
being held this year. 
The location of the Coliseum is the 
most easily accessible in the city. Many 
car-lines pass it, it is only astone’s throw 
from the leading hotels and theatres and 
the shopping district, and directly faces 
the subway entrances and exits of the 
Public Garden and Boston Common. 
With such attractions as Sousa and his 
25 
band, raised to its full strength of sixty- 
five pieces, having as soloists Miss Lucy 
Allen and Miss Louise Ormsby,  so- 
pranos, and Miss Rose Reichard and 
Miss Giacinta della Rocca, violinists, in 
an entirely different program each after- 
noon and evening—Sousa’s new march 
The Fairest of the Fair,’’ played for 
the first time on the opening day and to 
be heard only at the Fair—a free vaude- 
ville hall which seats 2000 people, where 
are to be seen high-class vaudeville acts, 
the latest moving pictures, etc., and 
Onaip, the mysterious Hindoo, in his 
marvellous illusion of the piano and 
pianist floating lightly on the air—the 
patron of the Fair will be amply repaid 
for his 25c admission fee, which includes 
all the above attractions, together with 
others yet to be announced. * 
A Household Necessity. 
If you live anywhere in New England, 
there is one publication that should be in 
your home every day. ‘There is no oth- 
er paper in Boston or New England that 
compares with the Boston Daily and 
Sunday Globe. Fathers like it, mothers 
like it, children like it. 
No other medium gives the educa- 
tional matter that is contained in the 
Boston Globe. The series of ““Famous 
Gems of Prose’’ that are now running 
in the Globe, are alone worth the price 
of the paper. 
This collection of the best of oratory. 
and literature that the world has _ pro- 
duced should be cut out and kept in a 
scrap book in every home. 
In no other paper is there a household 
page that compares with the one run by 
the practical housekeepers of New Eng- 
land in the Boston Daily and Sunday 
Globe. A careful perusal of this page 
in the Globe every day is of the greatest 
help to women in keeping their house- 
hold expense down and setting a table 
that will please all the members of the 
family. 
In addition to its many features, the 
Globle has the best equipped force in 
New England, over 1000 men being 
employed daily in the publication of the 
Daily and Sunday editions. You get the 
results of their labors in the Daily and 
Sunday Globe; also special features, 
which cost in the course of the year 
thousands of dollars. 
See your newsdealer tomorrow and 
arrange to have the Boston Daily and 
Sunday Globe delivered regularly at your 
home. 
Senatorial Convention 
The Third Essex Senatorial Republi- 
can convention will be held at Newbury- 
port, at eleven o'clock next Monday 
morning, Oct. 5. Senator Shaw will be 
nominated by acclamation, no doubt. 
B. D,. V.. Underwearat-Bell’s.. * 
