NO Rod ioe Ret B Ron By 7a 
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? 
Sprague, 
Tel. 280. Reverse the charge. 
Then send your orders to 
Breed & Brown Co. 
Beverly, Mass. 
Poultry and Game 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
The Best Quality 
Beverly Farms 
Meats and Provistons 
Orders will be 
Morning 
Collected Every 
and Promptly Filled. 
ese 
Mass. 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
Roses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
Work. 
Beverly Farms 
for Decoartions and Funeral 
Hale Street 
A Story A Day 
A story a day for the 365 days of 
1914—that is part of what you get 
by subscribing $2.00 for The Youth’s 
Companion’s new volume. The fifty- 
two weekly issues of The Companion 
will contain at least 365 stories, and 
all the other kinds of good reading 
that can be crowded between two 
covers—the best advice on athletics 
for boys, articles on dress and recrea- 
tions for girls, contributions by fa- 
mous men and women, suggestions 
for the care of the health, etc. 
For the year’s subscription of $2.00 
there is included a copy of The Com- 
panion Practical Home Calendar for 
1914, and all the issues for the re- 
maining weeks of this year, dating 
from the time the subscription is re- 
ceived. 
If you want to know more about 
The Companion before subscribing, 
send for sample copies containing the 
opening chapters of Arthur Stanwood 
Pier’s fine serial of life in a boys’ 
school—‘“‘His Father’s Son.” With 
them we will send the full Announce- 
ment for I9QI4. 
Tur Youtu’s COMPANION, 
144 Berkeley St., Boston, Mass. 
New subscriptions received at this 
office. 
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. 
i3each Street Hale Street i 
Manchester Beverly Farms} 
Rau 
WENHAM 
Services at the Village church Sun- 
day morning will include a sermon by 
the minister, Rev, F. M. Cutler, Sun- 
day school at noon. 
meeting at 6, 
cal Service atr7: 
Friends still exclaim in satisfaction 
over the interior improvements of the 
church auditorium. Among them 
last Sunday was a lady related to 
Dr, John S. Sewall, pastor of the 
church from 1859 to 1867. 
Nov. 9 marks the opening of the 
Y. M. C, A. week of prayer, when all 
members throughout the country are 
requested to give attention to the re- 
ligious object for which the associa- 
tion really exists. 
On Wednesday evening at 7.30 the 
mission reading circle under the au- 
spices of the department of missions 
will meet at the residence of Mrs. 
Charles F. Elliott. Following the 
study there will be a social hour. 
Yee Gah 
There will be a musi- 
A cold electric process has been 
perfected in England for protecting 
iron and steel from corrosion, 
Apparatus has been invented by a 
Russian musician to strengthen the 
muscles of the hands of violinists. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
The newly-elected officers of Oli- 
ver Wendell Holmes council, K. of C., 
were installed Sunday afternoon, by 
District Deputy M. Francis Buckley 
and suite, of Gloucester. Supreme 
Agent Frank Sherlock was _ present 
and addressed the meeting. The fol- 
lowing officers were installed: Grand 
knight, Lawrence J. Watson, 2nd; 
Deputy grand knight, Daniel J. Ne- 
ville; chancellor, S. John Connolly; 
warden, Cornelious D. Shea; finan- 
cial secretary, Michael Cadigan; re- 
cording secretary, Edmond L. Mce- 
Donnell; treasurer, Eugene T. Con- 
nolly; adviser, P. J. Mitchell; trustee 
James E,. McDonnell; lecturer, Hom- 
er E. Callahan; inside guard, John 
Connors; outside guard, Thomas 
Connors. 
Maurice Silverberg and family have 
concluded their season at Beverly 
Farms and returned to their home at 
Roxbury. Mr. Silverberg has chang- 
ed the location of his tailoring busi- 
ness from ror to 206 Mass. avenue, 
Boston, in the Fensmere Building. 
One of the largest and most valua- 
ble timber trees of the country is the 
tulip tree. known to lumbermen as 
yellow poplar. It is related to the 
magnolias, but is the only tree of its 
kind in the world. 
of The World 
READ PICTURES 
=», INSTEAD 
\ oy OF TYPE 
200 Gartoons Tell More 
Than 200 Columns 
The World’s Best Each Month 
Cartoons from dailies and weeklies published in 
this country, London, Dublin, Paris, Berlin, 
Munich, Vienna, Warsaw, Budapest, St. Peters- 
turg, Amsterdam, Stuttgart, Turin, Rome, Lisbon 
Zurich, Tokio, Shanghai, Sydney, Canada, an 
South America, and all the great cities of the 
world. Only the 200 best out of 9,000 cartoons 
each month, are selected. 
A Picture History of World’s Events Each Month 
CAMPAIGN CARTOON S — Follow the 
campaign in “CARTOONS” and watch the oppos- 
ing parties caricature each other. 
YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION $1.50; SINGLE COPY 15¢ 
One free sample copy will be mailed by addressing the pub- 
lisher, H. H.WINDSOR, 318 W. Washington Street, CHICAGO 
