BEVERLY FARMS 
Frank A. Williams, who is ill at 
the Beverly hospital from lead pois- 
oning, is reported to be improving, 
A cottage prayer meeting was held 
at the home of Wm. H. Blanchard 
on Hart St., Tuesday evening. 
John L. Chapman starts a five- 
year lease of the Spaulding gardens 
on Greenwood Ave., next Monday, 
where he will conduct them as a com- 
mercial proposition. 
Unclaimed letters at the Beverly 
Farms, P, O., week ending Feb. 26, 
1914: Miss Madlena Bledman, Miss 
Brine, Mrs. E. Dragon, Albert 
Woodbury.—Lawrence G. Watson, 
P. M. 
THE RAMBLER 
Selling five and cent goods 
may seem a piffling sort of business, 
but the Woolworth concern shows a 
profit of $6,461,118 for the past year, 
being an increase of over a million 
dollars compared to the preceding 
year. There are quite a few real 
merchants, who sell expensive arti- 
cles, unable to make such a _ good 
showing for the year’s overturn of 
merchandise. 
ORB 9 
A St. Paul, Minn., dispatch says: 
“That newspapers have a right to de- 
cline advertising when they deem it 
objectionable, even if it is submitted 
to them under a yearly contract, is 
the effect of a decision handed down 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
C. 
F. 
SAWYER 
Established 1877 
CARRIAGE AND AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING 
NEW COVERINGS, TOPS and SLIP LININGS for AUTOMO- 
BILES. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALTERATIONS 
Special Department for Automobiles 
Painting and Varnishing 
218-236 Rantoul Street, Cor. Bow Street a 
First-Class Work 
BEVERLY 
Telephone: Factory 158-M Residence 449-W 
today in district court here. The 
case came up when a local depart- 
ment store was sued by a local paper 
to recover money due under a yearly 
contract which the store manage- 
ment had declared void because cer- 
tain portions of its advertising copy 
had been rejected by the paper.” 
cA 
% 
That it doesn’t pay to go to sleep 
at a concert was demonstrated at one 
of the popular concerts of the Phil- 
harmonic orchestra at the Y, M. C. 
A., Salem, one Sunday recently. A 
number of the works of Haydn were 
being featured, and incidentally, this 
composer has a reputation of being 
slightly funereal in his compositions. 
They are slow-moving pieces, and 
not destined to elicit very loud de- 
monstration from an ordinary aud- 
ience. However, with all his soai- 
emnity, which jis reflected in his 
music, Haydn was also something of 
a joker, apparently, for he composed 
what he called the “Surprise Sym- 
phony,” planned especially for those 
of his friends who occasionally went 
to sleep during his concerts. That 
he knew what he was doing when 
he wrote it was demonstrated at the 
above mentioned concert by the 
Salem orchestra. The symphony it- 
self is wonderfully doleful, slow of 
movement and, except to music-loy- 
ers, apt to be a little dul. After a 
few passages of almost lullaby soft- 
ness, a voluminous fortissimo chord 
HAVE VOUR PRESCRIPTIONS 
FILLED “A® 
DELANEY’S 
AP@THEGARV 
Cor. Cahot and Abbott Str 
BEVERLY 
We keep everything that a good drug store 
should keep. 
Telephone Connection 
S. A. GENTLEE & 80N 
Funeral Directors and Embalme:. 
Calls answered day or night 
277 Cabot Street BEVERL} 
Residence, 16 Butman St. 
shook half the audience from their 
seats, and caused one individual who 
had started to doze in a comfortable 
nap to suddenly wake up. “Good 
Night” was all he said when he rose ~ 
from the arms of Morpheus, but 
surely that was a rather ludicrous 
appreciation of Haydn’s artistry. But 
Haydn accomplished his purpose by 
this exceptionally strong chord—he 
kept his audience awake. 
A man explodes with indignation 
when a woman ceases to love him, 
yet he soon finds consolation; a wo- 
man is less demonstrative when de- 
serted, and remains longer inconsol- 
able—Anon, 
1802 
1914 
During this period THE BEVERLY NATIONAL BANK by conservative methods, 
has won the confidence of the citizens of Beverly, the deposits now aggregating 
$1,200,000.00. 
Prompt and careful service afforded to all depositors. 
Jasper R. Pope, Vice-Pres. 
Andrew W. Rogers, Pres. 
Edward S. Webber, Cashier 
