46 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
BAKER, the Family Shoeist 
No. “You will have ease wherever you go 
10 With our boots made high and our shoes cut low, 
We never squeeze the poor little toe 
And each single one has room to grow. 
Next week No. II 
—Dawn 
BAKER FAMILY BOOT SHOP 
101 Munroe Street & & Lynn 
Nahant and Pride’s, Mass. 
50 YEARS in business, but better, younger and more 
active than ever. ) 
Te]. Beverly 517 
Tel. Beverly Farms 75-W Tel. Nahant 1 and 2 
Le aa ae 
gether with representatives of several of the Girl Scouts 
clubs throughout the state. The girls displayed their 
woulity by several exhibitions and drills. Luncheon was 
served at the Eastern Yacht. club, which was followed 
by a talk by Miss Emma R. Hall of New Bedford. 
‘They say you can’t square the circle.” 
“Well, you can do it after a fashion,” said the mathe- 
matician, “just as when you go out for a walk you circle 
the square.”—Pittsburg Post. 
MARS SLEHEAD 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gair Macomber of “Rockledge,” 
Marblehead, are touring the Maine coast in their motor, 
and were recent arrivals at the Poland Spring House. 
Mrs. Leverett B. Merrill, who has a pretty summer 
home at Goodwin’s Landing, Marblehead, is entertaining 
e Rev. Temple Cutler of Brighton as her house-guest 
for the remainder of August. 
The War Relief Committee of meee which 
consists of Mrs. William R. Castle, Jr., chairman, Miss 
Edith G. Fabens, Mrs. Herbert J. Hall, Mrs. Everett 
Paine, Mrs. Robert S. Peabody and Mrs. John R. Purdon, 
have urged all ladies interested in the war relief work to 
continue their efforts for the cause, as never can there be 
too many hospital supplies for the wounded soldiers. 
They also urge as generous contributions as possible which 
can be sent to Everett Paine at the National Grand Bank, 
Marblehead. 
THE WoRKERS IN THE TRENCHES on both sides of 
the lines must have some very definite ideas of the work- 
men in Great Britain and the Socialists in Germany, who 
are exerting their “personal liberties” in the face of the 
impending disasters. 
Pianos to Let 
Prices Right Service the Best 
Agent for 
The Aeolian Vocalion 
The Phonograph of Richer Tone 
FE. F. Green 
| 30 MARKET STREET LYNN 
Aug. 11, 1916. 
Marblehead PFlandicratt Soctety 
134 FRONT STREET 
a; [End of car line] 
Unusual Girrs, ANTIQUES—BREAKFASTS, 
LUNCHEONS, AFTERNOON TEA 
WINCHENDON—THE NUREMBURG OF 
AMERICA 
(Continued from page 10) 
And the horse in all his grandeur stood boldly in the cen- 
‘ter of the workroom with the rest of his companions of 
the day’s making. 
The girl workers are mostly engaged in making the 
quantities of toy trunks and the many sets of dolls furni- 
ture, all of which are some day to gladden the heart of 
some little tot. They also assemble the tools which fill the 
minature carpenters’ chests, so handy for the boys. 
An important part is again played by machinery in 
the making of the trunks. The sides and bottoms of 
proper thickness and length are assembled and nailed by 
machines. Papering machines, on which huge rolls of 
plain and colored paper are wound, facilitate the covering 
and lining of the exteriors and the trays. The tin edges, 
which reinforce the body and the lid, are also tacked on 
by machines. But here is where their work, stops. For 
the hinges, handles, locks and slats are nailed by hand as 
this process requires a more individual treatment. From 
the wee trunks for the very smallest dolls’ clothing to 
‘runks of real leather which could almost hold a young 
child’s wardrobe, are made by the trainload. 
The girls as well as the men in this factory are pro- 
ficient in the handling of the hanmmer. In the room filled 
with the toy furniture the girls wield the hammer just as - 
effectively as the men and it is almost inconceivable that 
these beds, bureaus, chairs, etc., can be so quickly put up 
and made into the daintiest furniture that ever a child 
could possibly want. And not only is the furniture de- 
signed for beauty but it is also designed in a substantial 
manner, well fitted to withstand the strain of the wear and 
tear of childhood usages 
“It is an ill wind that blows nobody any good” and so 
the strife across the water has taught our own manufac- 
turers confidence in the ability to not only make, but 
excel, in the construction of toys well worth marketing. 
And the end is not yet, for inventive genius is now har1 
at work on original designs for the coming Christmases, 
when the retail trade will look to the American made toy, 
as the model on which they will spend their money and 
spend well. 
Yearly subscription to North Shore Breeze, $2.00. 
N. W. Edson & Co. 
Groceries & Provisions 
Finest Creamery Butter a Specialty 
Palatable Distilled Water 
Pure as Dew 
32-34 Union St. Lynn, Mass. 
a eee 
