Ne Oy Ry, Te 
Satie Ot Re 
BR EE ZE 27 
BEVERLY FARMS 
John J. Gillis, who was killed by 
an unknown automobile late last 
Friday night at North Beverly, was 
well known and had many friends 
here through his occupation as 
driver of the W. A. Caldwell ice 
wagon in this section for several 
years. 
Beverly Farms people are earn- 
estly requested to attend the public 
meeting to be held in Neighbor’s 
hall on Monday evening next. The 
meeting has been ealled by Mrs. R. 
S. Bradley, Mrs. W. B. Thomas, 
Miss M. Silsbee, Rev. N. R. Walsh, 
Rey. C. S. Pond and Thomas D. Con- 
nolly, the committee from the Bev- 
erly Farms branch of the Beverly 
Improvement society, to have an ex- 
pression of opinion and to discuss 
the several things for improvement 
at Beverly Farms. 
John West colony, Pilgrim Fa- 
thers, will have their installation of 
officers next Friday evening, Octo- 
ber 20th, probably in Neighbor’s 
hall. The work will be performed 
by Dept. Supreme Gov. Mrs. Estella 
McLaughlin of Lynn, assisted by the 
degree staff from Francis Higginson 
colony of Salem. Supreme Trustee 
William H. Carberry of Jamaica 
Plain will be present. 
The USS Mayflower is scheduled 
to close its visit at Beverly Farms 
next Sunday morning, leaving for 
New York. During the stay here, 
the officers and crew have made 
many friends and the commander is 
to be complimented upon the fine 
and gentlemanly make up of the en- 
tire crew. 
Next Wednesday afternoon, Octo- 
ber 18th, in the assembly hall of 
the Farms school, Mrs. R. 8. Brad- 
ley will give a talk on ‘‘The Exter- 
mination of the Fly,’’ to which the 
public is invited. Mrs. Bradley is 
chairman of the sanitation depart- 
ment of the Women’s Municipal 
League and also of the Beverly 
Farms branch of the Improvement 
society. To her work, many im- 
provements in this vicinity are due. 
At the meeting, Miss Norton, mar- 
ket inspector of the league, will 
show lantern slides on the fly and its 
work. 
It has been suggested by many 
that a public meeting be called soon 
at the Farms to make selections for 
the berths of aldermen at large also 
ward aldermen. The gathering at 
the time could ratify any candidate, 
who may be in the field at present 
and by so doing would be an act to 
show the city at large that Ward 6 
desired to be represented. Then, 
again, it is much more satisfactory 
DO YOU WANT CLEAN COAL that can be depended upon 
to always run uniform? 
Do YOU want delivery in canvas bags by 
AUTO TRUCK? 
Is your home in Beverly, Beverly Farms, Wenham, Hamilton, Essex, 
Manchester, or Magnolia? 
Then send your orders to 
Sprague, Breed & Brown Co. 
Tel. 280. 
Reverse the charge. 
to the citizens and also to the can- 
didates themselves to receive the 
nomination in a way that shows the 
candidates are not self nominated. 
Beverly Farms people on Wednes- 
day evening, were again treated to 
a fine band concert by the USS 
Mayflower band, in Neighbor’s hall. 
The hall was filled to its capacity 
and from the beginning to the last 
piece each selection received hearty 
encore. Three selections on the pro- 
eram were composed by the band’s 
director, G. DeGiorgio. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Grove (nee 
Ella Low) are receiving congratula- 
tions over the arrival of a boy which 
was born early yesterday morning. 
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hardy and Mr. 
and Mrs. Elmer Standley spent 
Wednesday evening and the holiday 
at the former’s camp at Gravelly 
pond. 
Letters remaining unclaimed at 
the Beverly arms postoffice, October 
11th: Mrs. Margaret Burns, G. Gil- 
bert, Edward Nathen, Mrs. Minnie 
Kierney, Mrs. Lame, Miss R. Mullas- 
key, Miss Elizabeth Needham, Miss 
Hannah Nestors, Mrs. Gardner B. 
Williams, S. P. Ware, John, T. 
Willets, esq— William R. Brooks, 
postmaster. 
Cleaning up Capital. 
When Congress folds its tent and 
steals away from its legislative 
haunts, the cleaners and renovators 
get busy in Washington. 
buildings where the Senators and 
Representatives have their offices 
are scrubbed, mopped, painted and 
cleaned from top to bottom. The 
Capitol itself is put through similar 
treatment and the outside is sub- 
jected to treatment with lines of 
hose through which fire engines 
WYATT’S MARKET : 
Beverly, Mass. 
The big’ 
force water to the very top of the 
dome. It’s always an _ interesting 
operation to see the Capitol getting 
its annual bath. Then the streets 
are repaired and the trees trimmed 
and everything around Washington 
is got into the best possible shape 
for the reconvening of Congress in 
December. Owing to the extra ses- 
sion there was little time to do all 
this during the present summer, so 
there is unusual hurry and bustle 
now. 
Somebody has said that a dog with no 
teeth has a soft snap. We’d rather think 
that he has no snap at all. 
F. W. VARNEY 
Apothecary 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
The Home of 
BAYOLINE 
QUININE 
Hair Tonic 
A toilet requisite which has stood the 
test of over a quarter of a century. 
FOR restoring, beautifying and pre- 
serving the hair, promoting its growth, 
preventing baldness, removing  scurf 
and dandruff and eradicating all diseases 
of the hair and scalp. 
PRICE 50c and 75c 
Telephones 77 and 8027 
(If ene is busy call the other) 
WEST STREET 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Meats and Provisions 
Also a Full Line of 
Choice Vegetables and Fruit in their season. 
Poultry, Fresh Eggs, Butter 
ORDERS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED 
