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ed the 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Mrs. Fred H. Dines, was the week- 
end guest of Mrs. Lawrence J. Wat- 
son. 
Mrs. John M. Publicover of High 
st. has been a guest of Mrs. Charles 
Dixon at Massonet this week. 
Mrs. Howard A. Doane entertain- 
Ladies’ Sewing circle last 
- evening at her home on Hale st. 
Albert E. Potter went to Water- 
ville, Me:, last Tuesday where he 
will be located for the next two or 
three months. 
Miss Cassie Williams and Miss 
Mary Jack returned home from the 
Beverly Hospital Wednesday, each 
young lady on the road to complete 
‘recovery from recent operations. 
Much interest is being taken by a 
Jarge party of Beverly Farms ladies 
in sewing for the destitute Belgian 
babies and children. On Tuesday af- 
‘ternoon a large party met at the St. 
{ 
John’s social rooms on West street 
where a great amount of work was 
done during the afternoon. Tea was 
served. The work will be continued 
next Tuesday afternoon. 
after 
dancing and an evening at cards. 
Commencing the evening of Wed- 
nesday, Feb, 16, and continuing on 
their regular meeting nights for the 
balance of the winter, St. Margaret’s 
Court of Foresters will hold public 
whist and dancing parties in Mar- 
shall’s hall, similar to those held last 
‘winter, which were very successful 
and enjoyabie. 
The affair planned 
for Feb. 16, will be a whist party, and 
that will alternate between 
morning the 
Early Wednesday 
“Campbell harness shop on West st. 
caught on fire by the exploding of a 
3 
a. 
wan : . 2 
lamp, starting a brisk fire. Employes 
of the shop and some others, kept the 
fire from spreading too badly until 
the fire dept. arrived, when it was 
quickly put out. Damage to the 
building’s interior and te stock of 
‘goods will amount to several hun- 
dred dollars. 
Another of Beverly Farms’ old 
time summer residences is soon ‘to 
disappear. Stephen A. Edwards, the 
Centerville contractor, has purchased 
the Mrs. John L. Gardner house on 
Mingo Beach hill and will start in at 
once tearing it down. The house is 
most beautifully situated and was 
considered in its day one of the most 
attractive summer cottages along that 
section of the shore. There is a re- 
port that a new summer residence is 
to be built on the site of the old 
house, 
TREE PRUNING 
Everything in Forestry 
."> 
Li 
Poultry and Game 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and-~ Berries 
The 
Best Quality 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
MW@eats and Provistons 
Orders will be Collected Every 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
MASS. 
The regular monthly meeting of 
the Beverly Farms Fire Dept. takes 
place next Monday evening at the. 
fire station. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S$. Osgood 
of Rockland, Me., have been among 
the visitors at Beverly Farms the past 
week. 
Beverly Farms still continues to 
have its share of grippe victims. 
Many are reported to be ill with this. 
fashionable sickness at the present. 
Inquiry has been made this week as 
to why Albert EF... Johnson, driver of 
the Smith-M. & M. express team 
around Beverly Farms has looked so 
happy. It is all because a fine 9-lb. 
baby boy was born to Mrs. Johnson 
at the Beverly Hospital Thursday of 
last week. 
Last evening Station-agent Wilbur 
FE. Macdonald was most happily re- 
minded of it being his goth birthday 
by a goodly number of his friends 
and neighbors calling at his home. 
The time was most happily spent at 
whist and music. 
At the organization of the Demo- 
cratic City committee on Saturday 
evening last, in Beverly, John C. Mc- 
Carthy of Beverly Farms was en- 
dorsed for the berth of Postmaster 
at Pride’s Crossing. Papers to this 
effect were made out and forwarded 
to the proper officials. 
“Every Tuesday from 2.30 to 5 
o’clock the ladies of Beverly Farms 
meet here to sew for the destitute 
Belgian babies. You will be wel- 
core.” The above small placard ap- 
pears in the window of the new so- 
cial rooms of the St. John’s parish, 
in the Murphy block on West st. 
LARCOM THEATRE, BEVERLY. 
Friday and Saturday—‘‘The Great 
Divide,” in five parts. 
Monday and Tuesday—The thea- 
tre will be occupied by the B. P. O. 
E., who will present a professional 
vaudeville show. 
Wednesday and Thursday—Char- 
lotte Greenwood and Sydney Grant 
in “Jane.” Paramount News-picture. 
Coming—Fannie Ward in “The 
Cheat.” Miss Merle Moses, soprano. 
ee 
02-029 O 16+ e Bee Bee Ber Orr Oi Oe Bs Ore O11 G10 Gs Ber O19 Oss Or Orin ew 
= 
Hopes Women Will 
Adopt This Habit 
As Well As Men 
Glass of hot water each morn- 
ing helps us look and feel 
clean, sweet, fresh. 
Dee Ore See Ser Ser Ser Ser Ger Ser Gee Ser \er Ger Orr SerSer@ingergee: 
Happy, bright, alert—vigorous and 
vivacious—a good clear skin; a nat- 
ural, rosy complexion and freedom 
from illness are assured only by 
clean, healthy blood. If only every 
woman and likewise every man could 
realize the wonders of the morning 
inside bath, what a gratifying change 
would take place. 
Instead of the thousands of sickly, 
anaemic-looking men, women and 
girls with pasty or muddy complex- 
ions; instead of the multitudes of 
‘nerve wrecks,” “rundowns,”’ “brain 
fags” and pessimists we should see a 
virile, optimistic throng of rosy- 
cheeked people everywhere. 
An inside bath is had by drinking, 
each morning before breakfast, a 
glass of real hot water with a tea- 
spoonful of limestone phosphate in it 
to wash from the stomach, liver, kid- 
neys and ten yards of bowels the pre- 
vious day’s indigestible waste, sour 
fermentations and poisons, thus 
cleansing, sweetening and freshening 
the entire alimentary canal before 
putting more food into the stomach. 
Those subject te sick headache, bil- 
iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, 
colds; and particulary those who have 
a pallid, sallow coinplexion and who 
are’ constipated very cften, are 
urged to obtain a quarter pound of 
limestone phosphate at the drug store 
which will cost but a trifle but is 
sufficient to demvnstrate the quick 
and remarkable change in both health 
and appearance awaiting those who 
practice internal sanitation. We must 
remember that inside cleanliness is 
more important than outside, be- 
2zause the skin does not absorb impur- 
ities to contaminate the blood, while 
the pores in the thirty feet of bowels 
do. 
Members of Preston W. R. Corps 
are rehearsing a play which they will 
present to the public in Marshall’s 
hall later on. The affair is being 
given for the benefit of the Beverly 
Farms S. of V. camp. 
OHO Hee See See See Ger Ger Serer Ger Ger Ser Ser See Gee Oe O++O++ G++ Os Os 
R. E. HENDERSON 
BOX 244, BEVERLY. MASS. 
Telephone. 
