NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
to see the sights. 
serrat Station. 
lots. 
more rent. 
crowded. 
Fourth. 
721. 
Better and safer than banks or stocks. 
schools 
A Good Investment 
Be your own landlord. 
Buy a piece of the land, now for sale, adjoining the beautiful Mont- 
Put by five or ten dollars a month and own oneofthese attractive house 
Later build your own cottage, make your own garden and pay no 
This is an ideal location, between Beverly and Prides’s Crossing, on 
electric and train lines, near High and Grammar 
and not 
Houses rent and sell rapidly and land values are steadily increasing. 
All grades and prices from $300 to $3000. 
A very attractive plaster house is going up on Magnolia St. 
large double house on Spring St. is nearing completion. The boys’ play- 
ground, opposite the station, will be opened with a ball game on the 
The neighborhood tennis court is now ready. 
The 
Leave the noisy town and come out on the Fourth for a glimpse of the 
fields and woods of Montserrat; only five minutes from Beverly. 
Our representative will be “at the office, 157 Essex St., every day ex- 
eept Sunday and evening appointments may be made by phone No. 
Montserrat and Prospect Hill Syndicates 
warm distributing near-news and 
warmed-over information. 
And yet there are people who 
“eome to Washington to spend the 
summer. 
“Washingtonians will never cease to 
wonder what kind of a climate those 
people endure when at home. 
Shades of Pluto! The 
This does not apply, of course, to 
the large number of people who come 
to Washington every summer simply 
Probably there ‘s 
no place in America which holds the 
SAMUEL H. STONE 
164 Cabot Street, Beverly, Mass. 
Notary Public Justice of the Peace 
Oldest and Strongest English and 
American Insurance Co.s 
North Shore Real Estate a Specialty 
concentrated interest for tourists 
that Washington does. Undesirable 
as most people consider the city from 
a residential point of view, it must 
be admitted that it is one of the 
strongest drawing cards held by the 
tourist agencies. First of all, the 
city itself as the nation’s capital is 
a place of surpassing interest. Its 
unique plan, its broad avenues, its 
tree-arched thoroughfares, its nu- 
merous parks and public places, its 
innumerable statutes—some of them 
to be sure, conceits in pot metal and 
vile samples of the founder’s art— 
make Washington a city which the 
‘stranger will always find interesting 
for itself alone. Then the city has its 
historie shrines, its Capitol, the 
White House, the huge buildings, 
more or less bizarre, housing the va- 
rious departments, and many private 
residences of really palatial aspect. 
But of all the sights in or around 
Washington there is nothing which 
carries such a lasting and perennial 
charm as Mount Vernon, the beaut- 
ful sylvan home of the first president 
of the Republic, situated in a most 
commanding location overlooking 
the Potomac River. 
Senator Dixon of the Committee 
on Military Affairs submitted a mi- 
nority report on June 17 regarding 
the bill to increase the Engineer 
Corps of the Army. The minority 
declared its belief that it would be 
unwise at this time to increase the 
Engineer Corps until there was 
urgent peed of it when bills were 
pending for the increase of six other 
