30 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
BEVERLY. 
County Commissioner Elbridge C. 
Sawyer attended the annual meeting 
of the County Commissioners of the 
Commonwealth at Clinton on Wednes- 
day. 
Miss Letta Stone of Montpelier, 
Vt., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. 
Frederick A. E. Hamilton. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph D. Standley 
have returned from a trip to Vermont. 
Mrs. George W. Bryant of Hale 
street is entertaining Miss Lena Staf- 
ford of New York city. 
Edgar S. Foster, Dr. Edmund B. 
Dudley, Arthur S. Kent, James Owens 
and James Field are enjoying a cruise 
along the Maine coast in Mr. Foster’s 
yacht, “ Adina.” 
Miss Mabel H. Parsons is on a va- 
cation at the Rockaway house, York 
Beach, Maine. 
Miss E. Agnes Wallace has been 
enjoying the cool breezes at Great 
Chebeague island, Portland harbor, 
Maine. 
Mrs. William Stevens is visiting 
friends in Belfast, Maine. 
Rev. York King of Providence, 
R.I., has been the recent guest of his 
brother, Fred King, station agent at 
North Beverly. 
THE BREEZE—one year, one dollar. 
Automobile Cases. 
In the district court at Salem on 
Saturday two Manchester cases 
of violating the automobile speed 
law were called, and all paid fines 
of $10. They were James Foley of 
Magnolia, a Manchester chauffeur, 
and Ernest Taylor of Swampscott 
The former was apprehended Fri- 
day and Taylor on Thursday The 
latter refused to stop when sig- 
nalled by the officers, and the offi- 
cials were obliged to go to Swamp- 
scott to get him. 
On Monday the case of Alfred S. 
Williams of Brookline, continued 
from June 26 for disposition, came 
up for sentence. 
Mr. Williams, through counsel, 
stated that he and his brother-in- 
law were riding on the day in ques- 
tion, with their families, having 
their wives and children with them. 
With such a precious freight aboard, 
it was urged, the man would not be 
likely to speed the machine, and if 
he was going beyond the speed 
limit, he was doing so unintention- 
ally. 
““That’s what they all sav,” said 
Judge Holden. He thought, how- 
ever, that the spirit of the law had 
not been violated, under the cir- 
cumstances, and as the speed was 
only three or four miles over the 
limit, he placed the case on file. 
Harry M. Curry of Magnolia, 
who was held up Sunday, was re- 
lieved of $10 for over-speeding his 
auto. 
A summer resident of Wenham 
was up Tuesday for the Manches- 
ter police, and fined $20 for second 
cffence. 
Success of “The College Widow.” 
“The College Widow,” given a 
splendid impetus by the great au- 
dience of the opening night, is now 
handsomely started on its Boston 
run. It came with gilt-edged rec- 
ommendations, but seemed fairly 
to exceed the anticipations of the 
first-nighters,—the football scene, 
in particular, almost stampeding 
them. Credit for the tense interest 
in this scene Mr. Ade has always 
been particularly glad to award to 
George Marion, Mr. Savage’s gen- 
eral stage director. It is an earnest 
request of the management that 
everybody attending “College 
Widow” performances shall be seat- 
ed by 8 o’clock. The brightness of 
Mr. Ade’s dialogue begins with the 
rise of the curtain; to miss any part 
of it is a mistake. Wednesday mati- 
nees have been resumed for the sea- 
son. 
Ladies’ Knickerbocker shoes at 
Bell’s * 
ONE OF THE BEST 
THE NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF BOSTON, MAS- 
SACHUSETTS, is a company of magnificent strength; it is a company whose record of 
over SIXTY YEARS is a large part of all that is beneficent and honorable in the history 
of life insurance. 
Hon. FREDERICK L. CUTTING, Insurance Commissioner, in his recent annual report 
just issued, in speaking of the NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL and two other companies, says: 
‘‘ These are all old and well-seasoned companies, the youngest being several years past 
its golden anniversary. 
They are not ‘big’ companies according to modern notions of 
bigness, but are growing normally and are managed by conservative men.’’ 
Of the three companies that the Commissioner so highly commends, the NEW ENG- 
‘LAND MUTUAL is considerably the oldest. 
It is a Boston company, and has been man- 
aged and conducted by such Boston men as have had much to do with the development 
of the city during the two generations that have passed. The NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL 
is practically, a Savings Bank Life Insurance Company. 
‘‘But, nevertheless, there are companies which have been satisfied with moderate 
growth on a permanent basis. 
There are officers who know that size doesn’t necessarily 
indicate strength, that a small company may be relatively stronger than a larger one, 
that it may do better year after year by its policy-holders, and, knowing these things, 
have to be content with a moderate pace. 
People are not going to cease to buy life in- 
surance, but the wiser ones are going to exercise more care in choosing the company and 
selecting the policy.’’— Commissioner Cutting. 
We sincerely recommend the NEW ENGLAND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY to the 
good people of the North Shore. 
J. H. HINKLEY, 
North Shore Representative, 
181 Hale Street, Beverly, Mass. 
IT HAS NO SUPERIOR. 
WEST D. ELDREDGE, 
Gen. Agt. for Eastern Mass., 
104 Hanover St., Cor. Washington St., 
Boston, Mass. 
