20 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
DO YOU WANT CLEAN COAL that can be depended upon 
to always run uniform? 
Do YOU want delivery in canvas bags by 
AUTO TRUCK? 
Is your home in Beverly, Beverly Farms, Wenham, Hamilton, Essex, 
Manchester, or Magnolia? 
Then send your orders to 
Sprague, Breed & Brown Co. 
Tel. 280. Reverse the charge. 
Poultry and Game 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
Orders 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
Beverly Farms 
A. CULBERT 
Importer and Manufacturer of 
FINE HARNESS, RIDING SADDLES AND HORSE FURNISHINGS 
The Best Quality 
J. 
CENTRAL aa ee 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
Roses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
fer Decorations and Funeral Work. 
Hale Street Beverly Farms 
Hoiiis STREET THEATRE. 
One of the undoubted successes of 
the past season in New York was C. 
Haddon Chambers’ comedy, “Passers- 
By.” This season Mr. Frohman is 
presenting this play with Charles 
Cherry as the star and it is also among 
the big successes of the present theat- 
rical year. “Passers-By” unquestion- 
bly owes a great deal of its popular- 
ity to its Saneness and humanity. It 
is a page “torn out of life itself.” Its 
people are real men and women and 
the types which the author of “The 
Tyranny of Tears” ana@ “Captain 
Swift” has introduced have been 
limned with the greatest skill. Be- 
fore “Passers-By” was produced in 
New York, it was the big success of 
its year in London. If Peter Waver- 
ton’s valet had not been interested in 
the passers by on the street below, 
Peter Waverton would most probably 
have not worked out his life’s story 
A full line of Stable Supplies, Trunks, 
Repairing in all its branches. 
Beverly, Mass. 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
Meats and Provisions 
will be Collected Every 
Mass. 
Bags and Leather Novelti 
Driving and Auto Gloves. 
; BEVERLY FARMS 
BRANCH, BEACH STREET, MANCHESTER) 
J. B. Dow John H. Cheever 
JAS. B. DOW & CO 
Coal and Wood 
We are now prepared to deliver 
coal at short notice to all parts of 
Manchester and Beverly Farms. 
Beach Street Hale Street 
Manchester Beverly Farms 
in the manner he did. 
Charles Frohman has provided an 
exceptionally strong company for the 
support of the star and has given 
“Passers-By” a very handsome pro- 
duction. Mr. Frohman presents 
Charles Cherry in “Passers-By” at 
the Hollis Street theatre for a lim- 
ited engagement which will open on 
Monday evening. The regular mat- 
inees on Wednesday and on Saturday 
will be given and an additional mat- 
inee on Thanksgiving Day. 
He—My dear, you spend too much 
money in false hair. Look at your 
puffs. 
She—And you spend too much in 
cigars. Look at your puffs—Stray 
Stories. 
The man who gets the best results 
is the one who goes after them him- 
self. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Next Thursday afternoon Rey. 
Clarence S$. Pond is to deliver an ad- — 
dress to the Woman’s Organization 
at the Dane Street church, Beverly, 
with “The Church and Its Relation 
to the Community and Its Obligation — 
for Social Service” for his subject. 
poeyojes useq sey Ve “AON ‘Aepuns 
-as men’s Sunday and the churches — 
have been requested to set apart that 
morning in the interest of the young — 
A speaker will be assigned to © 
men. 
each church. 3) 
Letters remaining unclaimed at the 
Beverly Farms  postofficé 
ending Nov. 13th—Mr. 
George Bancroft, 
Timothy Crowley, Miss G. Cross, J. 
and Mrs. 
O. Ellison, Thomas Henderson, Mas-. 
ter W. Kundtz, Miss Margaret Mc- 
_ Donnell, John F. McDonald, Joseph — 
G. Worin, Miss Harriet W. Northup, 
Mr. C. W. Preston, Ralph C. Tyler. 
Wm. R. Brooks, postmaster. 
The mystery surrounding the sud: 
den disapearance from home on Novy. 
5th, of Mrs. Emily A. Smith, wise 
Captain Duncan Smith of the Beverly 
Farms. fire department, was explained 
last Sunday when Mrs. Smith’s body © 
was found on the rocks at “Smith’s 
Beach,” on the Henry Lee estate. A 
rope tied about the 
waist, and, at the other end, a loop 
which had apparently held a weight 
of some kind, indicated that the death 
had been in very poor health and it is 
was 52 years old. For some time she 
had ben in very poor health and it is 
thought her death was caused by a 
derangement of the mind. She was 
a woman of exceeding kindness, with 
a great many friends who testify to a 
great number of good deeds which 
she had performed among them. Be- | 
sides her husband, she leaves a daugh- 
ter, Miss Jessie Smith; a son, Gordon 
Smith and her father, Captain Reuben 
Grush. For the last 17 years, Mrs. 
Smith had been an active member of 
John West Colony of Pilgrim Fathers. 
Funeral services, held at St. John’s 
Episcopal church on Tuesday after- 
noon, were very largely attended. The 
Rev. Mr. George officiated. Inter- 
ment was in Beverly Farms cemetery. 
In accordance with our usual ens- 
tom at this season of the year we 
are offering the Breeze for the hal- 
ance of the year FREF to all new 
subscribers. All names added to 
our list between now and New 
Year’s will be dated Jan. 1, 1913. 
for week — 
George Burpee, 
woman’s 
