16 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Get Your Name 
in the 
New Telephone Directory 
AE 
LAST 
CALLS 
CT oe DEP 
aN GARE Co DEP 
ry A 
NOV Vw 
enc eMEneROEN™ 
RTMET ENT— 
CALL 
Please give us your order early TOMORROW 
if you wish to insure the listing of your new 
or changed telephone in the Spring Issue of 
the Boston Telephone Directory. 
Give your order at 22 
Summer Street, 
Manchester, or by telephoning the Manager. 
New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. 
I. W. ROLFE, Manager 
MAGNOLIA 
Rev. Dr. Walter S. Eaton will oc- 
cupy the pulpit at the Sunday morn- 
ing service at the village church and 
in the evening a very fine soprano 
singer, Miss Belle Gottschalk, and 
other musicians will give a program. 
The entertainment will be furnished 
by the same good friend of ,the 
church who has made the winter 
series of concerts possible. Miss 
Gottschalk was born in Westfield, N. 
J., displaying from her earliest days 
an uncommon musical nature and 
intellectual powers. She is a grad- 
uate of Holyoke college and later 
studied in Berlin for the operatic 
stage under Etelka Gerster, Frank 
King Clark and Fraulein Whlkcke, 
one of the teachers of Geraldine Far- 
rar. She made an auspicious debut 
at a Gerster concert and her promis- 
ing career was an assured success, 
which was interrupted by the out- 
break of the strife in Europe. Miss 
Gottschalk has a reputation, young 
though she be, for great interpretive 
ability, and her personality is one that 
makes an instant appeal to every va- 
riety of audiences. She will give the 
following program Sunday evening: 
Romance, Debussy 
Du Vist die Ruh, Schubert 
The Dove, arranged by 
Kurt Schindler 
Flower Rain, Schneider 
I Love the Moon, Rubens 
From Paradise, Guy d’Hardelot 
Like the Rosebud, La Forge 
Passing By, Purcell 
The Year’s at the Spring, Mrs. Beach. 
“A Pair OF SIXES” AT WILBUR 
Boston has agreed with New York 
and Chicago in pronouncing “A Pair 
of Sixes,” the play which opened a: 
the Wilbur Theatre last Monday eve- 
ning for a limited engagement, the 
most amusing farce that has ever been 
seen on the stage. The fact that this 
laughter play ran for an entire year 
in New York and Chicago was fairly 
sufficient assurance that it was an un- 
usual production; but it only required 
the endorsement of the Boston press 
ton. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Officers of Andrew Standley camp, 
Sons of Veterans, will be installed in- | 
to office at G. A. R. hall this evening, 
The work will be performed by Dept. 
Aid Wm. E. Choate of Beverly, as- 
sisted by members from the Beverly 
camp. . 
Coasting has been a favorite pas- 
time, during the past week, for Bev- 
erly Farms young people. A number, 
however, have been reported’ to have 
received injuries. Among them, Miss 
Margaret Brady, who was thrown off 
a swift-moving double runner, hurt- 
ing her ankle very badly; for a time 
it was thought to have been broken. | 
Joseph Rourke was another victim. 
Martin Malloy, age 60,. died sud- 
denly last Friday at his boarding 
place, the home of Michael O’Brien, 
at Pride’s Crossing. He was unmar- 
ried, but left two sisters living in Bos- 
The deceased was born in Ire- 
land, but had lived in this country 
many years, principally in this. vicin- 
ity. He was a laborer employed by 
the various contractors and was popu- 
lar with his fellow workmen. Fun- 
eral services were held Sunday after- 
noon at Beverly at the Star-of-the- 
Sea church and burial was at the 
Montserrat cemetery. 
Mrs. James Wood, a former well 
known Beverly Farms resident, died 
at her late home in Medford the lat-. 
ter part of last week. The husband 
of the deceased is also a well-known 
former resident of the Farms and is 
a brother of George F. Wood, Hart 
street. é 
MANCHESTER 
At a special meeting of the board 
of selectmen last night the matter of 
protest as to the inscription on the 
new bell was discussed and the board 
decided to do nothing about it, unless 
some formal protest is made. The 
board feels it has done perfectly 
right in having the names of {the 
members inscribed on the bell and the 
name of the original donor left off as’ 
the bell now belongs to the town and 
not to the First Parish. ! 
Past Sachem Harry S. Tappan of 
Conomo tribe, Red Men, was recently ~ 
presented with a handsome past’ ’ 
sachem’s jewel. OEE 
Week of Prayer will be observed by — 
the Baptist and Congl. churches next ~ 
week with union services on Sunday © 
evening at the Congl. church, (ser- 
mon by Mr. Warner) and again the. 
following Sunday at Baptist church»: 
(sermon by Mr. Hatch). Services * 
at Congl. Chapel, Tuesday and Wed-~ 
nesday evenings, at Baptist church,;o 
Thursday and Friday evenings, 
