NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
For 
A Gift 
Elegant things of sterl- 
ing silver in neat silk- 
lined cases. We are of- 
fering unusual values — 
goods of the first quality 
that are very low priced. 
Cream Ladle and Sugar 
Spoon in case, only $4.50 ; 
one-half dozen heavy 
Dessert Spoons in case, 
$13; medium size Soup 
Ladle in case, $9; beauti- 
ful Gravy Ladle in case, 
$3.75; Salad Set (fork 
and spoon) in case, $6.50. 
We can furnish you 
with almost any combina- 
tion and priced from $2 
to as high as you care to 
pay. 
If you are interested 
come in and see what we 
have to offer you. You 
need not feel obliged to 
buy. ’ 
Baird-North Co., 
250 Essex St., 
SALEM. 
Where many pieces dis- 
continued from former 
catalogs are marked at 
cost. 
HEADOUARTERS! 
For cleansing, Pressing, Repairing 
and Dyeing all kinds of garments. 
Dry cleansing a specialty. In this 
process the most delicate shades and 
colors can be cleansed. 
A. E. BUTLER, of Gloucester, 
for many years with Chas. S. Tappan, is now 
located in Room 5, Tappan Block, up one 
flight. 
{<=> Especial attention will be paid to all ordere 
sent by express, and same will be returned C. O. D. 
Always state in ordering the work to be done, nams 
and address. 
MANCHESTER 
‘Roderick Rose and family will move 
into the Soulis house on Lincoln street 
shortly. Mr. Harding and family, now 
occupying the tenement, will move to 
the cottage on the Denegre estate. 
William H. Norie came on from 
Chicago Thursday and is spending a 
few days with his brother, George 
Norie and family on Bennett street. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Gould and Mrs. 
Gould’s mother, Mrs. Nichols of Tops- 
field, spent Sunday in Manchester, vis- 
iting the former’s son, Arthur Gould. 
A maid from the Lewis family, at 
the Dr. Brown cottage, Sea street, 
was taken to the Beverly hospital 
Tuesday to be operated upon for ap- 
pendicitis. 
Real Mark-down in Ladies’ Shirt 
Waists at the Old Corner Store. * 
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Knoerr spent 
the latter part of the week at Old 
Orchard and Cape Elizabeth, Me., re- 
turning Tuesday of this week. 
Mr. Wakefield, superintendent of 
Swiftmoor farm, at Montserrat, will 
continue his talk on “‘Commercial Fer- 
tilizers,” at the next meeting of the 
N.S. Horticultural society, next Fri- 
day evening. 
The selectmen have granted licenses 
under the new law regarding the car- 
rying of intoxicating liquors, to the 
American, Smith’s and Dunn’s ex- 
presses. 
Miss Sadie Wiles of Providence, R. 
I., is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Charles 
Chadwick. 
Wm. G. Webber Co. to 
Make a Big Addition 
The people of the North Shore will 
learn with pleasure that the Webber 
Co. are about to make a large addition 
to their present establishment. The 
steady and rapid growth of their busi- 
ness has compelled them to do this. 
They have taken the entire building 
on the corner of Washington and 
Essex streets, with the exception of 
the ground floor now occupied by the 
Merchants’ National bank. Contrac- 
tors are now at work taking down 
walls, putting in large plate glass win- 
dows, and will in a few weeks cut 
arches through to connect their pres- 
ent store. When completed, the firm 
will occupy the entire second and 
third floors of the corner building, 
thus adding many hundreds of feet of 
extra floor space, and the result will 
be the spreading out of many depart- 
ments which at present are very much 
overcrowded, and the store being so 
centrally located, in fact, right in the 
heart of Essex county, it will be 
Bigger, Busier and Better than ever 
before. » 
oT 
A 
SPECIAL 
SALE 
Wall Papers 
In patterns that have 
been discontinued — 
in quantities of 6 to 20 
rolls to a pattern. A 
big line to select from 
—HALF usual prices. 
Lace Curtains 
in one — two — three 
pair lots—to close 
them we name ONE- 
LHIRD OEE susual 
prices. 
Straw Mattings 
All the small or room 
lots have been culled 
from our stocks and 
cuts made in the prices 
averaging HALF for- 
mer ones—JAPS and 
CHINAS plain and 
fancy WHOLE CAR- 
PETS in Linoleums 
—splendid values — 
Carpets that are worth 
75 and 90 cts. are now 
reduced to 59 cts. sq. 
yd 
H. M. BIXBY & CO, 
242 Essex Street, Salem 
FOUR FAST TRAINS 
TO _ 
NEW YORK 
VIA 
& Albany R.R. 
“Springfield Line” 
Leave SOUTH STATION as follows: 
9.15 a.m. ‘*‘DAY EXPRESS,”’ Buffet Parlor 
Cars and Day Coaches. Boston to New York, 
without change. Due New York 3.15 p.m. 
12 O'CLOCK ‘‘LIMITED,’’ Pullman Parlor 
Carsand Day Coaches. Boston to New York, 
without change. Dining Car Boston to New 
Haven. Due New York 5.30 p.m. 
4 O'CLOCK ‘*LIMITED,’’ New Parlor Cars 
and Vestibuled Day Coaches. Boston to New 
York, without change. Dining Car Springfield to 
New York. Due New York 9.30 p.m. 
11.15 p.m. ‘“‘NIGHT,EXPRESS,’’ Pullman 
Sleeping Cars and Day Coaches. Boston to New 
York, without change. Due New York 6.48 a.m. 
Similar service returning from New York on the 
same schedules. 
Send for copy of ‘‘ Springfield Line” folder, and 
see what the Boston Journal has to say of the par- 
lor cars on the “4 o’clock Limited.” 
City Office, 366 Washington Street, 
A. S. HANSON, Gen. Pass. Agt., Boston. 
qgiaor reps” 
Boston 
Cm RE S  TE E  S SRREL T 
