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32 . ’ NORTH SHORE BREEZE . 
LAND AT MONTSERRAT 
ATTRACTIVE LOTS AT LOW PRICES, EASY TERMS, ON 
WALKER FIELD PARK AND PEABODY FIELD. SOME CHOICE 
LAND JUST OPENED ON PROSPECT HILL AND MONTSERRAT 
HIGHLANDS. SEE REPRESENTATIVE AT OFFICE IN THE NEW 
STORES, ON ESSEX ST., DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY, BETWEEN 1.30 
AND 4.30. ADDRESS 157 ESSEX ST., OR TELEPHONE BEVERLY 
721 FOR MORNING OR EVENING APPOINTMENT. 
Montserrat and Prospect Hill Syndicate 
POINTS OF INTEREST 
The development of land in the Prospect Hill and Montserrat dis- 
tricts has now reached a point where the Trustees will find it easy to’ 
handle and the Edward T. Harrington Company, having completed the 
pioneer work. has withdrawn. More than a hundred lots have been sold 
on Walker Field Park and Peabody Field, number of attractive houses 
have been built and others are in process of erection. All the remain- - 
ing lots on Peabody Field have risen $50 in price. One lot sold a year : 
ago, has recently changed hands at an increase of $200—50 per cent. 
gain on the price paid. The value of this sort of investment is appealing 
to level headed young business men who will own their own homes and : 
watch them grow in value as this most inviting part of the city con- 
tinues to develop. In addition to the cheaper land near the Montserrat 
Station, the beautiful wooded tract, Montserrat Highlands. directly 
opposite the Station, is now plotted and offers charming sites for sum- 
mer homes and residence the year round. Maps and information may 
be obtained at the Real Estate Office. The terms of sale on all the land 
are easy; the lower priced land selling at $25 down, $5 or $10 payments 
monthly, a splendid way for a young man or woman to save. Seventy- 
five new lots are just opened on Peabody Field, at the foot of Prospect 
Hill, at $300 each, $50 down and $10 monthly. Eight have been sold this 
week, on which several artistic bungalows and cottages are to be imme- 
diately started. 
Some charming cottages are now-in readiness for sale or rent. 
The quaint Chantecler Inn, recently opened, is one of the attractions 
of Montserrat. ; 
We would advise buyers to come now, as values are likely to in- 
crease rapidly in this section. 
See A 
Thousands to See Circus. 
The North Shore towns will be well 
represented at Gloucester on Wed- 
nesday, June 29, when the Great 
Adam Forepaugh and Sells Bros.’ 
Big United Shows exhibit there. A 
great many from this section have 
made up their minds to go. The rail- 
roads are offering special induce- 
ments in the way of cheap fares. 
A glance at the list of artists and 
the wonderful curiosities to be seen 
this season with this big show leads 
one to believe that the limit of tre- 
mendous size as well as novelty has 
at last been reached. Great interest 
also attaches to the show because it 
comes this year, after an absence of 
several seasons, with the most costly 
outfit ever built by any amusement 
enterprise in the world. Ten acres 
of ground -will be under canvas. 
There will be a menagerie such as 
was never seen in this country in the 
past. The parade cost the circus 
kings over $1,000,000. What more 
ean be said? 
The wonderful sixty-one horse act 
is in itself a great enough attraction — 
to bring the people from a radius of 
100 miles to see it. The aerial spee- 
tacle offered by the Ty-Bell ‘sisters 
is even more wonderful. The acro- 
bats, the riders, the aerialists, ‘the 
gymnasts and the equilibrists are the 
pick of the best European’ talent. 
There are fifty clowns. They came 
from the comic opera theatres. of 
Kurope and the courts of Asiatic po-— 
tentates. Hvery man among.them is 
an artist, funny enough to maké a_ 
mule laugh: 
