50 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
course, more susceptible than the 
machine properly designed and built 
with weight proportionate to work 
which is called upon to accomplish. 
And this does not take into account 
the greater ease and comfort to be 
obtained from the stolid ‘‘car of the 
road,’’ the very weight of which can 
but be a source of comfort to its tour- 
ing occupants. 
o—oO 
Chain lubrication, though trouble- 
some, as it necessitates removing the 
chain is so beneficial to its life and 
efficiency and save so much useless 
work being done by the engine that 
it well repays the trouble it entails. 
The two main points «re to remove 
grit and dirt, which grind away the 
metal in the links and rivets, and to 
imsure due amount of lubricant 
reaching each rivet and the interior 
or bearing surface of each block or 
roller. To remove all dirt, boiling 
in soda or potash water for half an 
hour is a good plan. The chains 
should then be hung up to thorough- 
ly dry. When dry soak the chains 
for a few hours in a pan full of black 
lead and melted tallow; this msures 
the mixture reaching all the rivets, 
and when the chains are drained and 
wiped they show a clean, dry sur- 
face, to which mud and dust are not 
inclined to stick. 
New England Antiquities. 
The bulletin of the newly formed 
Society for the Preservation .of New 
England Antiquities, telling of a 
concerted effort on the part of a 
number of the leading citizens of 
Massachusetts and New England, to 
prevent the further destroying of 
New England antiquities has been 
recently received at the Breeze office. 
The gulletin is a well gotten up 
folder, containing a large number 
of cuts of the more famous land- 
marks each being accompanied by 
an article giving full information 
concerning it. With these is pub- 
lished a strong article dealing with 
the aim of the society and telling of 
the comparative inexpensiveness of 
carrying out its project. It first 
tells of the work of the smaller his- 
torical, ancestral, patriotic and sim- 
ilar societies, and although giving 
eredit to the above mentioned so- 
cieties for the great work they have 
done, the article makes it plain that 
they are more or less confined to a 
special object, whereas by a slight 
elaboration, as is proposed by the 
the New England society, one or- 
ganization could be made to cover 
the whole field. 
~ f 
(Jam 
| 
| 
Was 
v 
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13,1910 
oe) Manchester, Mass. 
Tickets good on Regular Trains only on the above d. 
will be on sale at the following rate: : je 
$1.05 ROUND$/.05 
Mee THE SEASON Now AT ITs HEICHT 
Uniting the sightseeing trips of the City, viewing Publi i i 
ights é t 7) ublie and Historie 
Places, with the pleasures of the Séashore, mialuging delightful 
TRIPS DOWN THE HARBOR 
SURF BATHING—SHORE DINNERS 
Ideal Summer Side Trips from Boston that include 
many interesting, instructive and picturesque 
short trips to Historie Lexington and Coneord, 
Quaint Marblehead, Salem with its famous his- 
toric places, Beverly the Popular Summer Capital 
and the unparalleled 
BEACH RESORTS 
DON’T FORGET THE DATE. 
NTASKET 
REACHES 
C.M. BURT,G.P.A. # 
Keith’s Theatre. 
One of the most important en- 
gagements of the summer is made 
by B. F. Keith for the appearance at 
his theatre in Boston next week, of 
Le Grande Pandore, the famous dol! 
revived from the court of Louis 
XIVth by John Colby Abbott. This 
doll has been the sensation of draw- 
ing rooms of Boston, New York and 
London and Paris, where it was ex- 
hibited by Mr. Abbott. The patrons 
in London being Mrs. Whitlaw Reid, 
the Marchioness of Londonderry ; the 
Dowager Countess of Sherewsbury ; 
Lady Newborough; Lady Palmer, 
and Mrs. George Cornwallis West. 
In Boston the doll was exhibited at 
Mrs. John UL. Gardner’s Fenway 
Court. 
This feature will make a special 
appeal to the women, especially as 
Le Grande Pandore shows the beau- 
tiful dresses of the time of Louis 
XIVth and Marie Antoinette, and is 
particularly interesting at this time 
on account of the hairdressing which 
is now reaching the alarming pro- — 
portions of these times. At Keith’s — 
the doll will be exhibited in all its’. 
beautiful costumes by Mrs. John 
Colby Abbott, wife of the inventor, 
and already has aroused the great- — 
est interest in Boston. a 
Telephone 124-3 Beverly Farms. 
Boston Telephone 1709-1 Back Bay 
New York and Boston Tailoring 
Company 
M. Silverberg, Prop. 
FINE CUSTOM TAILORS 
Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing 
a specialty. Stable and Livery Suits 
made to order. Careful attention to 
all work. Goods called for and deliv- 
ered. 14th season. Prices reasonable. 
West Street, Beverly Farms 
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 
