26 NOR 
H S H OR E 
BREEZE 
Peultry and Game 
Fresh Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
All of the Best Quality 
BEVERLY Farms, 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every Morning 
and Promptly Filled 
Mass. 
PIS Ds PA Bs DSN Des Pes SSP PR EG 
All Work Personally Attended to. 
TELEPHONE 65 
WILBUR J. PIERCE | 
(Successor’to Pierce & Pierce) 
y Plumbing, Steam and Hot Water Heating 
Special attention given te Testing of Plumbing and Drainage, 
Can be reached at any heur ef night by telephone in case of water leaks or any emergency, 
/| West Street - ” 
for which we are fully equipped. 
Estimates Cheerfully Given : 
Beverly Farms 
CaO NTRS VAS Va VASO SOOT VRE FARSI, Ves OW Ee VE 
J. 
Repairing in All Its Branches 
CENTRAL SQUARE, - 
A. CULBERT 
Importer and Manufacturer of 
FINE HARNESS, RIDING SADDLES AND HORSE FURNISHINGS 
A full line of Stable Supplies, Trunks, Bags and Leather Novelties 
Driving and Auto Gloves 
BEVERLY FARMS 
(BRANOH, BREACH STREET, MANCHESTER) 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
Roses, Herbaceous and Budding plants. 
Cut Flewers and Greenhouse Products 
for Decorations and Funeral Work. 
Beverly Farms 
Hale Street, 
J. B. Dow John H. Cheever 
JAS. B. DOW & CO. 
Coal and Wood 
We are now prepared to deliver 
coal at short notice to all parts of 
Manchester and Beverly Farms. 
Beach Street Hale Street 
Manchester Beverly Farms 
Telephone 195-3 Beverly Farms 
M. T. MURPHY 
ker of and Dealer i 
FINE HARNESS AND SADDLERY 
Sponges, Chamois, Oils, Dressings, 
and all kinds of supplies for the 
Horse, Stable and Automobile 
Beverly Farms, Opp. B. and M. Depot 
W. EF .- LOW: 
Sale, Boarding and Livery Stables 
SaDDLE Horses To Ler. 
All Styles of Carriages For Sale or Exchange 
Tel. Con. Vine Court, BEVERLY FARMS 
ALFRED HANSON 
HORSESHOER and JOBBER 
Special attention given to lame, interfering 
nd overreaching horses. Jobbing done with 
neatness and despatch. Gentlemen’s light 
driving horses a specialty. 
Vine Court, Beverly Farms, Mass. 
Soaps 
Concern yourself but with Today; 
Your will and wish. Since time began 
He looks to Yesterday and Tomorrow. 
Today has been the friend of man, 
But in his blindness and his sorrow 
Woo it, and teach it to obey 
THE NEW ENGLAND 
TAILORS 
I. Shuman, Prop. 
Formerly with R. H. White and C. F. Hovey Co. of Boston for 
8 years, have removed from Hart St. to Hale St., Cor. High St., 
near Hardy’s Grocery Store 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
Ladies’ Tailoring a Specialty. 
Repairing of all Kinds, Cleaning, Pressing 
and Dyeing. 
Work Called for and Delivered. 
Telephone 8149-2 2 Stores: Boston and Beverly Farms 
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baxter, who 
spent the summer at Beverly Farms 
returned to their New York home 
last Monday. Mr. Baxter was chauf- 
feur for the Willard family, who 
occupied the John Caswell estate 
this season. 
On Wednesday last Mrs. Louis 
Hardy and daughter, Miss Ruth 
Hardy, left for a two weeks’ vaca- 
tion to Washington, where they are 
the guests of relatives. 
- the erew, on every 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Assessor and Mrs. Theodore A, 
Holmes spent the past week on a 
vacation trip to New Hampshire, 
principally at North Conway. 
Mrs. Elmer Standley entertained 
the members of the Ladies’ Sewing 
circle at her home on West street 
last evening. 
Next Tuesday evening at the Bap- 
tist church chapel, commencing at 
7.30 o’clock, Mrs. John A. Fowler 
will give her personal experiences 
as an army nurse in the hospitals 
and on the battle fields during the 
Civil war. The affair is under + the 
auspices of the Girls’ club and a 
small admission is charged. 
The USS Mayflower, as per 
schedule, left her moorings off West 
beach last Sunday morning for New 
York. Many of the officers and crew 
before their departure were ashore 
bidding goodbye to their Farms 
friends and acquaintances. All ex- 
pressed their pleasure for the hos- 
pitality shown them. On the other- 
hand, the Farms people all have a 
good word to say for the gentle- 
manly conduct and good behavior of 
occasion when 
given shore liberty. 
The finance committee at last 
Monday evening’s meeting of the 
Board of Aldermen, reported in fa- 
vor of spending $8450 for a new 
police signal system. Under the 
rules, this was laid over for action 
until the next 
Farms much is heard unfavorable to 
this new idea—many claiming that 
there is no need of the new system 
and that if the city has the above 
amount of money to spare, it could 
much better be utilized for improve- 
ments much more needed. 
Miss Barbara Daniels has accepted 
a position in Boston. 
The first meeting, after the sum- 
mer’s vacation, of the Sarah. W. 
Whitman club was held last Wednes- 
day afternoon at the home of Mrs. 
Mark Knowles, Hart street. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank I. Lomasney 
and son Ivory spent the last week 
visiting relatives at Plainfield, N. J. 
~ Daniel J. Linehan and family, who 
for the past six or seven months 
lived in the Mrs. George Pierce 
house on High street, moved to Bos- 
ton this week. 
Letters remaining unclaimed at 
the Beverly Farms postoffice, Octo- 
ber 18th: Walter Oubrine, Edward 
Hatton, Miss M. C. Haskell, S. W. 
Ladd, M. O. Larson, Mrs. Edmund 
McKay, George M. Doucette, Miss 
Mary Daughton, G. C. Randall, Miss 
Laura Sullivan, Howard Sampson. 
—William R. Brooks, postmaster, 
meeting. At the 
—— 
