BEVERLY. 
Miss Helen F. Lee has been spend- 
_ ing the week in Portland, Me. 
Brush fires are calling the depart- 
ment out frequently these days. Not 
less than a dozen calls the past week 
have kept the fireman on the jump. 
No damage other than a little burned 
_ grass and a few trees is occasioned. 
Miss Sadie O. Allen has been vaca- 
tionizing in Brooklyn the past week. 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fox of Loth- 
rop street entertained Mr. and Mrs. 
William Fieldhouse of Methuen over 
Sunday. 
Mrs. R. S. Jennings of Englewood, 
Ill. is the guest of Beverly friends. 
Miss Clara F. Bell of the South 
school faculty spent the week in 
Washington. 
Mr.and Mrs. Herbert B. Joslin of 
Endicott Chambers are receiving con- 
gratulations on the birth of a daughter 
into their home. 
Miss Grace Maguire and Miss 
Hattie Standley have returned after 
a week’s vacation spent in the Capital 
City. : 
Miss Myrtle Stiggins is spending a 
few days at Brockton as the guest of 
friends. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Patch ob- 
served the fiftieth anniversary of their 
_ marriage at their home on Essex street 
Monday afternoon and evening. Many 
friends were present to extend con- 
gratulations. 
Easter Sunday will be observed in 
all the churches in the city tomorrow 
_ with appropriate exercises. Joyous 
_ songs of praise and adoration will arise 
_ and sermons appropriate tothe Resur- 
rection Day preached, with concerts 
_ by the various Sunday Schools in the 
evening. At the First Baptist church 
baptism will be administered to a 
number of persons. 
Class No. 2 of the Universalist 
_ Sunday school did its part in “help- 
ing kill the elephant” (the church’ 
debt) by giving a pleasing entertain- 
ment at the chapel on Monday even- 
ing. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Carriages and Carriage Repairing, 
1h Or 
At the Old Stand, 
Established 1877. ——— 
PAINTING. ano VARNISHING. 
SAWYER, 
126 Rantoul Street, corner of Bow, BEVERLY 
We put on the best RUBBER TIRES on the market. 
Don’t forget the Name and Number. 
The Prospect Hill Whist club was 
entertained at the home of Mr. and 
Mrs. Charles H. Kneeland, on Bow 
street, on Monday evening. Prizes 
were captured by E. F. Pedrick and 
Mrs. Ethel Perry, while Charles Moses 
and Mrs. A. M. Stevens received 
consolations. 
Miss Elsie F. Barter is the guest of 
Miss Susie Linnell at the latter’s 
~ home in Saco, Me. 
The Grand Army Fair has been 
the drawing card in town this week, 
and the tables and entertainments 
have been liberally patronized, as they 
should. The post will clear quite a 
sum from the enterprise. 
Misses Eva A. Davis and Jennie A. 
Cole of the High school faculty spent 
the April vacation in Philadelphia. 
Miss Mabel L. Kilham was re-elected 
president of the Lothrop club at its 
annual election on Friday afternoon 
last. 
Charles E. Kittredge has returned 
from a trip to the Pacific coast in the 
interests of the J. F. Carter Company. 
Building Operations and Land 
Improvements at the Farms. 
Building operations and land im- 
provements are in full blast at pres- 
ent in Beverly Farms. Among the 
work started this week has been a 
lerge addition to the stable of Rob- 
ert S. Bradley, who is also having 
quite extensive improvements made 
on the grounds of his estate. Messrs. 
D. Linehan & Son are the cowtrac- 
tors on the former, and Messrs. Con- 
nolly Bros. on the latter. 
At the estate of Mrs. Elizabeth P. 
Lee at West Beach a large wall, to- 
gether with other improvements, is 
heing made by a Boston concern. 
Thomas McKee .is having. built 
along Haskell street in front of his 
beautiful estate a rustic bean pole 
and red cedar fence, which, when 
completed, will add greatly to the 
appearance of landscape in this lo- 
cality. 
Upon the estate of Oliver Ames 
at Prides Crossing ground has been 
broken for a large automobile house, 
while the grounds about his charm- 
ingly beautiful villa are being still 
further beautified by the planting of 
a large supply of shrubbery. 
Frank Higginson is also having a 
lerge assortment of shrubbery and 
hardy plants set along the sides of 
his avenue, and at _ the field off 
Greenwood avenue, recently pur- 
chased by Wm. S. Spaulding for a 
vegetable and flower garden, an ex- 
tensive system of drainage and 
other improvements are being 
made. 
Charles K. Cummings is having 
built at his villa in Prides, opposite 
his house, and toward the ocean, a 
dirt tennis court, which, when com- 
pleted, will be equal to any of the 
already splendid surfaces to be 
found on many of the tennis courts 
along the North Shore. 
At Pride’s Crossing Publicover 
Brothers are building a 20x28 
auto house at the John Caswell estate, 
and at “Alhambra,” the John L. 
Gardner estate, occupied by the Tay- 
lors last year, an auto shed is also in 
the hands of this well-known concern. 
Repairs are being made on_ the 
“ Wheelright” cottage. 
To. get best results advertise in the 
North Shore BREEZE. 
i 
(325. PRINTING} 
) 
Will be done promptly, well, and at a 
reasonable price, if you have it done by the 
' NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
BEVERLY NATIONAL BANK. 
CAPITAL $200,000. 
Transacts a General Banking Business. Accounts solicited and every facility afforded for prompt and satisfactory 
business relations. Certificates of Deposit issued bearing interest for actual time outstanding. 
- SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES TO RENT. 
t 
$ 
S.30 A.M. TO Sat. 
ALLEN H. BENNETT, Cashier. 
OFFICE BLOULES =: 
ALBERT PERRY, President. ANDREW W. ROGERS, Vice-President. 
