Two Dozen Short Lobsters. 
Charged with kaving in his pos- 
session 24 slort lobsters, Joseph S. 
West, one of Manchester's veteran 
fishermen, was before Judze Holden 
in the district court at Salem, Mon- 
day. Mr. West was overhauled 
Saturday as he was landing at the 
wharf by Fish and Game Warden 
W. W. Nixon of Gloucester. The 
maximum fine of 24 lobsters would 
amount to $120 if imposed. The 
judge, however, after a consulta- 
tion with the wardens, decided that 
the ends of justice would be served 
Chisholm’s 
JEWELRY STORE 
Established for 31 YEARS at 
161 Main Street, GLOUCESTER. 
Particular Attention Paid to Repairing. 
[ALL THE WAY BY WATER 
JOY 
LINE 
THROUGH 
LONG ISLAND 
SOUND 
BY DAYLIGHT 
Folders and Information on Request. 
B.D. PITTS, Agt..308 Congress St., Boston 
Phone Main 6460. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
27 
by fining West $1 for each lobster, 
a total of $24. He gave West three 
weeks in which to pay the fine. 
Pop Concert at Magnolia. 
Tastefully decorated with hemlock 
boughs and oak leaves and illuminated 
with colored lights, the spacious dining 
rooms of the New Magnolia presented 
a most charming picture to the eye, 
and offered a pretty setting for the 
scores of handsome gowns and the 
pretty girls who were present on the 
occasion of the second annual pop 
concert of the hotel last Friday even- 
ing. Successful in every detail, the 
concert was one of the best given at 
Magnolia this season and attracted 
one of the largest gatherings. 
Not a little of the success of the 
affair was due to the untiring efforts 
of Mr. G. Henri Desmond, the well- 
known architect of Boston, who had 
charge of the decorations and very 
many of the details of the concert. 
The combined orchestra of the differ- 
ent hotels was in fine trim and their 
numbers were well applauded, espec- 
ially the overture from William Tell. 
The famous Temple quartet of Boston 
delighted the audience with their ren- 
dering of Adams’ “Comrades in 
Arms ”’ and Fields’ ‘‘ Company B.” 
Unquestionably the star of the even- 
ing was the well-known and popular 
baritone, Wilfred Russell, whose 
pupular songs created no end of en- 
thusiastic applause. Frequently the 
audience joined with him in the 
choruses of some of the better known 
ballads. Gus Edwards’ “Tammany ’”’ 
was so enthusiastically received that 
not until Mr. Russell attired himself 
in the garb of an Indian chief and 
executed a war dance was he allowed 
to rest. 
A fine line of Neckwear at the 
Keyou Millinery Parlors, Gloucester. * 
Do You Love the Country? 
Why not spend your vacation in the beautiful Greenwich valley 
among the lakes and hills of western Massachusetts at 
THE QUABBIN INN 
GREENWICH, 
MASS. 
The Inn is situated on a hillside, two hundred feet above Quabbin 
Lake. 
There are ten lakes and three rivers in the town and the average 
altitude is six hundred feet above sea level. 
ATTRACTIONS: 
Bathing, fishing, boating, canoeing, tennis, bowling, 
many beautiful drives through the woods and along the hillsides to points 
from which all western Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire may 
be seen. 
Rates, $8 to $12 per week. 
Free boats, bowling alleys and billiards. 
Send for Illustrated Folder. 
aos ee en Le 7 Lt OTD | SO Gites See G 
Wis PISO 
Sale, Boarding and Livery Stables. 
SADDLE Horses To Let. 
All Styles of Carriages For Sale or Exchange. 
Tel. Con. Vine Court, BEVERLY FARMS. 
Merchants & Miners Transportation Co. 
BOSTON, 
Norfolk and Baltimore. 
BEST ROUTE TO 
(SHINGION, RIGO 
AND ALL POINTS 
SIO AMMA! 
FOUR SAILINGS WEEKLY. 
Accommodations and cuisine unsurpassed. 
Tickets on sale at B.& M. R.R. office. Send 
for illustrated booklet and fares. 
A. M. GRAHAM, Agent, Boston, Mass. 
W. P. TURNER, G.P.A., Baltimore, Md. 
ALDEN WEBB, 
Practical Clatchmaker. 
Watch, Clock, Jewelry and Optical Repairing. 
MASONIC BUILDING, BEVERLY. 
SUMMER EXCURSIONS 
Via BOSTON & ALBANY 
ands. 
NEW YORK CENTRAL, 
Reduced rate tickets are now on sale to princi- 
pal Summer Resorts reached via the New York 
Central Lines, operating 12,000 miles of the finest 
railway system in America. 
THE BERKSHIRE HILLS 
are penetrated by the Boston & Albany R.R., ten 
trains a day leaving Boston, westbound, and 
Albany, eastbound, traversing this picturesque 
region of New England. 
Stop-over at NIAGARA FALLS 
Without Extra Cost. 
Pullman Sleeping, Parlor and Dining Car Serv- 
ice to this ht wonder is unsurpassed, 
and numerous trains leave Boston morning, after- 
noon and evening. ‘“ West-bound” folder, mailed 
on application, gives detailed schedules and train 
service. 
ADIRONDACK [MOUNTAINS 
are reached from _ Boston in Through Pullman 
Sleepers, leaving Boston daily, except Sunday, at 
3.32 p.m. 20 minutes stop at Springfield for sup- 
per, with early morning buffet service on train; 
due Saranac Inn 6.45 a.m.; Saranac Lake 7.40 a.m. 
and Lake Placid 8.10 a.m. Close connections for 
Northern Adirondack Mountain points. 
For additional train service, iilustrated liter- 
ature, etc., address A. S. HANSON, Gen. Pass. 
Agt., Boston. 
