24 
: Sh dh ah a hh heehee chaiche 4 
e 3: Beverly Harm 
Tomorrow Driver William §. Pike 
of the Farms hook and ladder truck 
will start on his annual ten days’ va- 
cation. 
Oliver Wendell Holmes council, 
K. of C., are to take part in the big 
Columbus Day parade in Boston 
next Wednesday, Oct. 12. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilyard 
have given up their tenement in 
Councilman KF. L. Woodberry’s 
house on West street and the same 
has been taken by Mr. and Mrs. 
Frank Gaudreau. 
Russell Cadigan, Thos. D. Con- 
nolly, 2d, and Ruel Davis are regu- 
lar players on the Beverly High 
school football team and are doing 
some excellent work in bringing 
victory to that team. 
Mr. and Mrs. William §. Pike and 
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall T. Larcom 
will leave the Farms tomorrow for 
about ten or twelve days’ vacation 
to be spent enjoying cottage life at 
Conomo Point, Essex. They have 
hired a horse and team to be kept 
near their cottage. 
Samuel F. Collamore, janitor of 
the Farms school house and grounds, 
has been confined to his home on 
Greenwood avenue the past week as 
the result of a bad shaking up re- 
ceived from a recent fall. Ezra P. 
Wilhams is substituting at the school 
house. 
Tonight in Marshall’s hall, John 
West colony, Pilgrim Fathers, hold 
their semi-monthly meeting. Two 
weeks from this date the new officers 
are to be installed. 
Don’t feel so badly because you 
lost it. A ‘‘lost’’ ad. in the Breeze 
will bring it back. 
Beverly’s Big Tax Payers. 
Prominent summer residents will 
contribute many thousands of dol- 
lars to the tax list, among them Mrs. 
Robert Dawson Evans of Dawson 
hall, Burgess point who will pay the 
largest tax assessed in Beverly this 
year, the total reaching $77,352.42. 
Of this assessment over five mil- 
lions of dollars is for personal prop- 
erty, the largest assessment for some 
time in the city tax book. Mrs. 
Evans is the owner of the cottage 
where President Taft has spent the 
past two summers and is among the 
twelve richest women in America. 
Frederick Ayer of ‘‘Avalon,’’ 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Established 1877 
Telephone: Factory 248-12. Residence 219-12 : te 
En Cis Aa yas 
218 — 236 Rantoul Street, 
Corner Bow Street, 
BEVERLY, MASS. 
Carriage and Automobile Repairing 
New Coverings, Tops and Slip Linings 
for Automobiles 
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALTERATIONS 
n eee 
Painting and Varnishing 
First-Class Work — 
Special Departmert for Automobiles 
Pride’s Crossing, is the second on 
the list and will pay a tax of $18,- 
964.76. Mr. Ayer is one of the sum- 
mer colonists who has brought his 
personal property in for assessment 
and is taxed on $1,003,770. Mr. 
Ayer has a magnificent summer 
home at Pride’s Crossing and his ac- 
tion in bringing his personal prop- 
erty to Beverly may be followed by 
other summer colonists. 
Henry Clay Frick of Pride’s 
Crossing pays individually a big tax, 
and his check for his tax this year 
will total $8,755.20 and of the assess- 
ment $553,000 is on real estate, most 
of it being levied on his Eagle Rock 
estate at Pride’s Crossing. 
Mrs. Edwin Carleton Swift of 
Swift-Moor,’’ Pride’s Crossing, pays 
a tax of $4,385.96 and the E. C. Swift 
estate a tax of $4,527.32. 
Judge William H. Moore of New 
York will pay a tax of $3,617 on his 
estate at Rockmarge, Pride’s Cross- 
ing. 
B. F. Keith’s Theatre. 
Burr McIntosh, who for several 
seasons has been making the success 
of his career as a star in ‘‘A Gentle- 
man from Mississippi,’’ will present 
at B. F. Keith’s theatre next week a 
new sketch written by himself, 
called ‘‘Out Yonder.’’ Mr, MelIn- 
tosh will appear in the principal role 
and be supported by an excellent 
company. The sketch deals with life 
in Arizona, is full of humor and 
breathes the atmosphere of the 
prairies. Another feature of the 
same bill will be the famous Jack 
Wilson, the extemporanecous come- 
dian, who is always springing sur- 
prises on his audiences. He will 
have with him his clever assistants, 
Ida Lane and Frank Batty. Still an- 
other strong combination will be 
Elphye Snowden and Earl Benham, 
who won such popularity with “The 
Follies of 1910’’ and ‘‘Little Nemo.’’ 
Irene Dillon, another musical come- 
dy favorite, recently with ‘‘Dick 
Whittington,’’ is also on the bill. 
ALDEN WEBB 
Watchmaker, Jeweler, Optician 
Repairing in allits Branches 
Masonic Bldg., Cabot Street, BEVER ye 
HAVE YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS 
FILLED AT 
DELANEY’S 
APOTHECARY 
Cor. Cabot and Abbott Streets 
BEVERLY 
We keep everything that a good drug store 
should keep. 
Telephone Connection 
S. A. GENTLEE & SON 
Funeral Directors and Embalmers 
Calls answered day or night 
277 Cabot Street BEVERLY 
Residence, if Butman St. 
Edward H. Gardner 
Druggist — 
Pride’s Crossing, Mass. opp. Depot 
Choicest line of Cigars, Candies, 
Ice Cream Sodas. Everything pure. 
Telephone 71-3 Beverly Farms 
— 
Telephone 124-3 Beverly Farms. 
Boston Telephone 1709-1 Back Bay 
New York and Boston Tailoring 
Company 
M. Silverberg, Prop. 
FINE CUSTOM TAILORS 
Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing 
a specialty. Stable and Livery Suits 
made to order. Careful attention to 
all work. Goods called for and deliv- 
ered. 14th season. Prices reasonable. 
West Street, Beverly Farms 
Breeze Subscription $2.00 a year 
