‘NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
BEVERLY FARMS 
_ The Beverly! schools re-open next 
_ Monday after a week’s vacation. 
_ Miss Maud Henderson of Hart- 
_ ford, Conn., has been among the vis- 
 itors at the Farms this week. 
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Kimball of 
Rockland, Me., have been visitors at 
the Farms this week. 
- During Lent there will be weekly 
services at St. Margaret’s church on 
Wednesday and Friday evenings. 
Eben Day has been re-appointed a 
member of the board of managers 
of public cemeteries. 
Harry J. Guinivan was called to 
Gardiner, Me., last Saturday to at- 
tend the funeral of his uncle. 
Frank I. Lomasney’s bungalow on 
Vine St. is being improved, a second 
story being added to it. 
The regular monthly business 
meeting of the Farms firemen will 
be held at the West St. engine house 
next Monday evening. 
Miss Eleanor Connolly has return- 
ed to St, Mary’s college at Hooksett, 
N. H., after spending a few days at 
‘home, . 
Joseph F. Fogg has many friends 
at the Farms who are interested in 
his appointment as postmaster at 
Pride’s, should there be a change. 
The whist party and dance given 
in aid of St. Margaret’s church at- 
Marshall’s hall Tuesday evening was 
well attended and was a thoroughly 
enjoyable affair. 
The Ladies’ auxiliary of St. John’s 
Episcopal church were entertained 
yesterdal afternoon by Mrs, Ernest 
Townsend at her West Manchester 
home. 
George S. Hadley of Hart Sis 
Beverly Farms’ oldest resident, 
celebrated his 86th birthday last 
Monday. He entertained many cal- 
lers, 
Conomo tribe of Red Men of Man- 
chester, under the direction of Past 
Sachem Fred Dougherty, will take 
a prominent part in the entertain- 
ment at the schoolhouse hall tonight. 
Harry S, Tappan is in charge of the 
musical program. 
John West colony upheld its rep- 
utation of being an excellent host 
last Friday evening in Marshall’s 
hall, when they had the Pilgrim 
Wanderers from neighboring colon- 
ies at their guests. At the business 
session Supreme Trustee Laurence 
S. Howard of Boston gave an inter- 
esting address on the benefits of the 
order and its condition. A social hour, 
with an excellent entertainment, and 
refreshments and dancing were the 
nucleus of a pleasant evening for all 
present. 
2I 
THE THISSELL COMPANY 
High Grade Food Products 
Post Office Building - 
Twe Phones, 150 and 151 
The snow and severe winter wea- 
ther has put a stop to all outdoor 
work at the Farms, and has thrown 
quite a few men out of work, 
Miss Eleanor Hull of East Taun- 
ton, formerly of the Farms, was a 
guest this week of former Mayor 
and Mrs. Charles H. Trowt at 
Pride’s, 
PROFIT SHARING. 
The principle and practice of pro- 
fit sharing will not solve all the prob- 
lems of industry, but under certain 
circumstances they will go a long 
way towards inducing loyalty and 
contentment which are the basis of 
industrial peace. Here in Boston we 
listen to the discussion of many phil- 
anthropic projects; a great deal of 
publicity is given to plans of this 
sort; but they seldom get ‘beyond 
the phase of discussion; but now one 
such plan of profit sharing is in full 
swing and without much trumpet 
blowing, 
Profit sharing has been on trial in 
the house of A. Shuman & Co. for 
a year, and it has proved a success; 
and as the plan is regarded there as 
business, not philanthropy, and the 
employee’s share of the profits de- 
pends upon his activity and salesman- 
‘ship stuccess—upon his sales—it has 
not only increased the business of the 
firm, but the morale of the firm’s 
regiment of employees. 
Everybody seems to be pleased 
with the result, and we congratulate 
A, Shuman & Co, 
Eva Fay At SALEM THEATRE. 
The inscrutable mysterious Anna 
Eva Fay, who stands today without 
an equal in her chosen profession, 
will appear at the Salem theatre all 
next week in a wonderful perform- 
ance of mental telepathy and_ psy- 
chic powers, and no doubt will be 
greeted by many crowded houses to 
witness the exhibition of the little 
high priestess of the occult science. 
Mind reading to Miss Fay is com- 
paratively easy, although it has taken 
years and years for the little woman 
to fully develop her telepathic pow- 
Later in life she determines the 
ers. 
possibilities of separating the soul 
from the body before death, and 
from this she evolves her mysteri- 
ous exhibition of somnolency. 
A visit to the Salem theatre will 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
If one is busy call the other- 
W. H. McCORMACK 
AUTOMOBILE 
and Carriage 
Painting and 
Trimming... . 
326 Rantoul Street 
Tel. Gon. 
Beverly, Mass. 
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convince the most sceptical of her 
wonderful powers of reading their 
innermost thoughts. There will be 
daily matinees starting. at 2; even- 
ings at 6.15 and 8.15. 
Minnesota has a forested area of 
28 million acres, the largest of any 
state east of the Rocky Mountains. 
Let us love! let us enjoy the fugi- 
tive hour! Man has no harbor, time 
has no shores: it runs, and we pass! 
—lLamartine, 
