20 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Poultry and Game 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
Eggs and _ Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
The Best Quality 
Beverly Farms 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
Mass. 
James B. Dow 
John H. Cheever 
JAMES B. DOW & CO. 
COAL AND WOOD 
We are now prepared to deliver coal at short notice to all parts of Man- 
chester and Beuerly Farms. 
Beach Street 
Manchester 
MAGNOLIA 
(Continued from page 14) 
From the time when he was first al- 
lowed to go out evenings, the gang 
had been able to laugh him into sany- 
thing. Finally he fell so low that 
when the saloons closed at eleven 
o’clock he went with the rest of the 
gang to cheap pool rooms where he 
met cheap thieves who dared him to 
go out ‘on the job’ with them. He 
went because they said he dared not; 
for the same reason he broke into 
the house with them and shared the 
swag with them. He was caught by 
the police and sentenced to prison 
for theft. Parents, don’t laugh your 
boys and girls into doing things; 
later in life they will meet men and 
women who will use the same 
method to win them over to their 
schemes. 
“Another type of the criminal is 
the man who never learned to do one 
thing well. The habit of failing will 
cling to them as long as life lasts. 
Teach your boys to succeed in what- 
ever they undertake. If your son 
is sweeping out an office for five dol- 
lars a-week, let him sweep _ it 
thoroughly and into the corners and 
behind the counters, too. I was talk- 
ing with a poor fellow the other day, 
who had held seven jobs in two years 
and had finally landed behind prison 
bars. He was a nice, splendid Trish- 
man, brought up in a large fanily 
of brothers and sisters who had 
found life in a strange city lonely. 
One evening a man at the table with 
him invited Mike to go down town 
with him. On the way home the 
stranger insisted that Mike have one 
glass of beer with him. [In two 
years Mike had gone from beer to 
whiskey and had become a criminal. 
Oak Street 
Beverly Farms 
Fellows, remember this, when you go 
to a strange city you can get ac- 
quainted with ten men who will drag 
you down while you are getting ac- 
quainted with one who will lift you 
u es 
Eee of the most noteworthy points 
of Dr, Stebbins’ address was that 
competition was never so keen as 
today and that to succeed a young 
man must both economize and study. 
He must work hard to be promoted. 
In almost all cases, the criminal 
proves to be a failure, who was the 
last man on the job, the first off the 
job and the most of the time out 
of a job. Very seldom ‘has a finer 
speaker or ian abler man come to 
Magnolia to deliver an address, The 
large attendance was a testimony to 
the appreciation felt here. 
B. F. Kertru’s THEATRE. 
‘Harry DeCoe, the wonderful bal- 
ancer with the tables and chairs, 
who had all Boston by the ears dur- 
ing his last appearance here five 
years ago, comes to B. F. Keith’s 
theatre next week after a long ab- 
sence that has taken him around the 
world. Since leaving Boston, De Coe 
has visited all of the out of the way 
places in the universe, and thrilled 
a hundred different nationalities with 
his unique act. At B. F. Keith’s 
theatre next week he will introduce 
a series of new and death defying 
feats new to Boston audiences. ‘The 
big comedy feature of the week will 
be Imhoff, Conn and Coreene, in 
their uproariously funny military 
travesty, “Surgeon Louder, U. 8, A.” 
The scene of this burlesque is laid in 
a western military camp and the 
characters introduced are a wounded 
soldier, an army surgeon who is deaf 
as a post, and a Red Cross nurse. 
Other splendid features. 
NATIVE oF BEVERLY FaRMs. 
Rev. George M. Preston, who died 
recently in ‘Medford, was a native of 
Beverly Farms. He was born here 
in 1830. He was the oldest of a 
family of nine children, He began 
preaching in (Medford in 1858, where 
he remained ten years. After leay- 
ing there he had pastorates in various 
parts of Massachusetts, Maine and 
the West,—nine in all, serving act- 
ively for 42 years. Following his re- 
tirement from active ministry he liv- 
ed in Medford until the death of his 
wife, nine years ago. Then he went 
to live with his son, Guy, a major in 
the regular army, at Fort Meyers, 
Washington, D. C., until a few 
months ago, when he returned to 
Medford. 
The funeral services were held in 
the First Baptist church. Rev. H. 
FE, Hinkley, a contemporaneous pas- 
tor in Winchester while Mr. Preston 
was in Medford, spoke intimately of 
their friendship. Several appropri- 
ate selections were sung by the Adel- 
phi ‘Male quartet. Rev. M. A, Levy — 
of Newton Centre read the Scrip-- 
tures and offered prayer. Extended 
remarks were made by the pastor of 
the church, Rev, F, E. Peterson. 
Mr, Preston is survived by his son, 
Guy, who is now stationed in Ha- 
wail; and two brothers and two sis- 
ters. 
New York HIPPODROME. 
A new element of novelty will 
beckon the visitor during the week of 
Jan. 25th at the New York Hippo- 
drome in the presence of many of 
the wealthiest, best known and hand- 
somest leaders of the woman suffrage 
movement, on (the stage. Three 
branches of the woman suffrage 
party—New York city, New York 
state and New Jersey, will hold de- 
monstrations and give benefit per- 
formances during the week, The 
two former are dividing Monday 
and Tuesday, and in addition to mak- 
ing street parades in Fifth avenue 
and elsewhere, will participate in the 
performance of ‘the spectacle “Amer- 
ica.”’ 
Fifty selected suffragettes—each a 
beauty—will take part in every per- 
formance, marching in the stage par- 
ade and participating in the scene 
depicting a suffrage demonstration. 
The banners of their organizations 
have long been in use on the Hippo- 
drome stage, but this will be the in- 
itial appearance of the leaders of the 
movement upon the stage. 
The world. is satisfied with words, 
few care to dive beneath the surface. 
