<= 4 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
If your Children 
are Wearing 
eC ADE T’’ 
Stockings, you are 
saving money on 
your hosiery ac- 
count. 
% Sarees 6 ES ps 
_ALEM.MASS. 
McCALL mh 
TERNS are 10c. 
andes LSC, 
none 
higher. Backui. 
ber Fashion Sheet 
now out. 
IN THE NEW FABRIC and every woman who has seen it is exclaiming ‘Show beautiful and light it is and how 
superior to any other eiderdown cloth ever produced.”’ 
Every Woman is 
distinctiveness all their own. 
being maintained at an even temperature. 
oppressive. 
Krinkledown 
Garments made from this pretty fabric have a style and 
The name given this new cloth is 
Interested | 
Therefore a garment made from it always feels comfortable, never 
A glance from the well informed woman will convince her how much better than any other fabric of 
like nature it is, for dressing sacques, kimonos, bath robes, baby clothes, coats, blankets, etc. 
Comes in White, Pink, Blue, Red and Gray. 
See it in our flannel department or send to our Mail Order Department for samples that will be promptly forwarded. 
It is also highly recommended by the medical profession for its self-ventilating qualities that insures the body 
Get the Habit of Shopping at Webber’s 
ag ee a 
MANCHESTER 
Miss Martha C. Knight went to Lowell 
Thursday where she will spend a fortnight 
with friends. 
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Kitfield of the 
Cove were in Lowell over the week-end 
visiting the latter’s aunt, Miss Ada Glid- 
den, who will probably spend the winter 
at Manchester. 
Jason Tuttle and family have moved 
into the house on North st., recently 
occupied by Mr. and Mrs. C. P. McCou- 
brey. 
Miss Bertha Haskell has accepted a 
postion inthe Toy Department at Almy, 
Bigelow & Washburn’s, Beverly. 
Miss Ethel McDiarmid returns today 
from a fortnight’s visit with relatives in 
Malden. 
Miss Lillian West of Magnolia is 
spending a fortnight with her aunt, Mrs. 
Herbert Strangman and family, who re- 
cently moved here from Magnolia and 
are occupying a tenement in the brick 
house near the Baptist church. Mr. 
Strangman is employed by Geo. S. Sin- 
nicks. 
Miss Beulah Townsend of. Peterboro, 
N. H., was a guest over Sunday of Mr. 
and Mrs. J. Davis Baker, Lincoln street. 
Mrs. Baker is confined to the house with 
a painful abscess on her foot. 
Frank §S. Baker started Tuesday for 
Norfolk, Va., where he will be employ- 
ed at his trade as painter during the winter. 
Miss Eva Whitman of Bevely was a 
guest over Sunday of Miss Nellie M. 
Leonard, Ashland ave. 
Manchester Youngsters Won. 
The Geo. A. Priest School football 
team went to Beverly Farms last Saturday 
afternoon and played the Grammar School 
team there defeating them 10 to 0, 
though they claimed the game 24 to 0, 
as the Farms boys refused to play the 
second half, thereby forfeiting the game. 
Two touchdowns were made by the 
lowing heads: 
Estates, viz: 
of fruit trees. 
ROBERT A. 
CONTRACTOR-GARDENER 
We will contract or do by bay work operations which come under the fol- 
Landscape Gardening, Forestry, Entomology, and the General Care of 
Planting (we will execute the plans of landscape gardeners and architeéts ) 
grading, lawns, paths, drives, trimming and thinning of wood-land and shade 
trees, spraying, moth work, hedges and formal shaped trees and shrubs, pruning 
Manchester boys in the first half. A. 
C. Holland was umpire.. The line-up: 
Manchester—W. Cawthorne re, Lewis 
Fritz rt, J. Gillis rg, Roland Stevens c, 
Gordon Cool lg, Chas. Hannabel It, J. 
Gray le, Shirley Stanley rhb, Ralph Lane 
Ihb, H. Lampron fb, Archie Cool qb. 
Beverly Farms—J. Donovan re, F. 
Pierce rt, .E. Brown rg, J. Shea c, J. 
Butler le, E. McDonald It, TT. Connolly 
le, G. Smith rhb, R. Pierce lhb, J. 
Quirk qb, E. Donovan fb. 
John Keenan, the Post-office Block 
hair-dresser, sells razors, razor strops, 
shaving brushes, etc. = 
MITCHELL, 
Lock Box 35. 
Cor. School and Pleasant Sts., 
Manchester-by-the-Sea. 
Telephone Connection. 
