NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
HEADQUARTERS 
FOR 
Eastman Kodaks and Supplies 
DEVELOPING AND PRINTING 
PREMO CAMERAS, $1.50 to $15.00 
BEVERLY NEWS CO. 
224 CABOT ST. 
THE LEADING SPORTING GOODS HOUSE IN BEVERLY 
TELEPHONE CON. 
ANNOUNCEMENT. 
I wish to announce that I have taken the Agency for the Ever- 
son Vacuum Cleaner, the only real portable cleaner; weight, 35 Ibs. ; 
enclosed in a Vulcanized fibre case; practically fire proof, and a 
perfect non-conductor of electricity. 
Will produce a greater effective vacuum at the nozzle, than 
any vacuum cleaner made. Costs less than 2 cents per hour to 
operate on any electric light socket. You can lift it with your 
finger. Costs only $80.00 complete with all tools. 
I would further state that I have a machine which I will rent 
for $2.00 per day, or will furnish a man to operate the cleaner, if 
desired. 
We have quite a number of orders ahead. Any person wishing 
the use of the machine, please place your orders now. 
D. T. BEATON, 
Manchester, - ~ - - 
R. SANDBERG 
...Ladies’ and Gents’ Custom ‘Tailor... 
SUITS MADE TO ORDER 
Mass. 
WISH to announce to the people of Manchester and other 
North Shore towns that I have opened an establishment in the 
WOODBURY BLOCK, 46 BEACH ST., MANCHESTER, MASS. 
(Opposite Masconomo Park) 
where I am prepared to do, Cleaning, Dyeing, Pressing, Repairing. 
Ladies’ Fancy cleansing a specialty. 
WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED AT SHORT NOTICE 
The summer colonists are rejoic- expense, Essex County 25 per cent. 
ing over the passing.of the bill at the and Marblehead 10 per cent. The 
State House for a new causeway and erection of such safeguards for 
lyreakwater from Marblehead — to 
Marblehead Neck. The’ appropria- 
tion asked was $50,000, the common- 
wealth to assume 64 per cent. of the 
Marblehead have been long neces- 
sary for the preservation of her 
beautiful and famous harbor. 
1) 
w 5a w 
+ # Suorivty Noirs + ¢ 
Marblehead. 
The New Fountain Inn opened 
weeks ago and has entertained large 
uumbers of transients, mostly Welies- 
ley College girls, some 70 in number, 
who made two sojourns in March 
and in April, beside many others 
from Greater Boston. The guests 
for the season and for summer so- 
journs are due on the 15th, and Prop. 
Unverhan reports a fine booking for 
the season, and many of his annual 
patrons are returning. Miss L. S. 
Goodkin of Boston has settled at the 
Inn for the season, and this week’s. — 
arrivals included: W. EK. Wood, 
Arlington; Elmer S. Shephard and 
Wife, Cambridge; Misses Louise and 
Ellen A. Gilman, Newton; C. W. 
Whiting, Boston. 
Waiter Nash of Commonwealth 
avenue, Boston, has a new conerete 
house at Clifton being erected for —~ 
his occupancy. It is near ‘‘Seven 
Gables,’’ the summer home of Chas. 
L. Eaton, president of the S. S. 
Pieree Co., Boston. Other new sum- 
- mer homes building in Clifton is an ~ 
Italian villa for Chas. M. Boyd of 
Newton and one of the Spanish mis- 
sion type for Aubrey T. Dunbar of — 
boston. 
The Rockmere inaugurated its 
eleventh season, May 14, and fine 
bookings and an early season are 
promised. Improvements have been 
made including new rooms and bath-— 
rooms. 
Swampscott. 
Mrs. John F. Tarbell of Common- 
wealth avenue, Boston, is settled in 
her Little -Point’s cottage, and. the 
widow of Charles H. Bond of, Bos- 
ton, who has been a frequent visitor 
to her estate at Whales Beach this 
spring, will not be here this summer, 
having rented it. 
Edward C. Bradley, esq., is  an- 
other member of Boston’s legal cir- 
eles who summers at Swampscott, 
and his Klmwood road estate is open 
for the season. 
The coming week will bring many 
cottage arrivals. The Prescott, Puri-. 
tan Inn and the Oakland, the small 
hotels, are open, but the Lincoln 
TIlouse does not inaugurate its sea- 
son until.the 18th, and the big, fash- 
ionable hostelry, the New Ocean 
house, extends its notable hospitality — 
for another season, June 24. 
