MANCHESTER. 
The Crickets will play the Haw- 
thorne’s of Salem at three o’clock 
tomorrow afternoon at the Brook 
street playgrounds. 
Rey. Dr. Frost will preach Sunday 
morning at the Baptist church on 
“The Church Transfigured,’’ and in 
the evening on ‘‘The Tares.’’ At the 
Sunday evening service the choir 
will be assisted by Miss Rebecea An- 
drews of Gloucester and Mr. Cool 
will render a bass solo. 
‘‘Universal Peace’’ will be the 
subject of Rev. L. H. Ruge’s sermon 
at the Congregational church Sun- 
day morning. In the evening his 
subject will be ‘‘The Planting and 
Growing Churches.”’ 
The Congregational Sunday 
School will hold a_ basket pic- 
nic at Tuck’s Point on Tues- 
day, July 18th. Barges will run 
from the common beginning at 9 
o’clock. Lemonade will be served, 
and ice-cream will be for sale dur- 
ing the afternoon. All members of 
the church and congregation are 
most cordially invited. If stormy, 
the picnic will be held the day fol- 
lowing. 
The Jr. Christian Endeavor and 
the Coming Boy Scouts are working 
to make the ‘‘Lawn Festival’’ in 
August, to be held on the Congre- 
gational parsonage lawn, a_ great 
success. Please patronize those that 
are selling tickets. It is intended to 
devote part of the proceeds for a 
fund in the interest of some lasting 
memorial to the church. 
JUNK 
If you have junk of any sort to sell— 
I pay a special price for auto tires and 
inner tubes. Send us a postal, or phone 
Beverly 347-2, and I will send a wagon at 
once. I pay spot cash. 
ROBERT ARTH, 13 Cox Ct., Beverly 
Also buyer and seller of poultry. 
Up one Flight 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
The Right Kind of a Hotel. 
We assume that when visiting 
Boston you are interested in know- 
ing just where to locate, in the right 
kind of a hotel, at prices entirely 
satisfactory to you, for the accom- 
modations you desire. 
Diagonally across from the State 
House on Beacon Hill is such a ho- 
tel, ‘‘The Commonwealth,’’ of 
strictly modern fireproof construc- 
tion, ten stories high, 212 rooms, 
from and above the sixth floor of 
which an unobstructed view may 
be had for ten miles toward every 
point of the compass. 
The elevation on Beacon Hill (the 
highest point in or around Boston) 
affords a delightfully cool breeze of 
fresh uncontaminated air during the 
hottest and most sultry months of 
summer. The location is within 
three minutes’ walk of Boston Com- 
mon, State House, Court House, 
Scollay Square, Tremont Street, and 
Elevated and Subway trains, six 
minutes to the theatres, and the 
principal shopping districts. Five 
and ten minutes to North and South 
Stations. 
The location is as quiet both day 
and night as a suburban residential 
district, thus assuring quiet and un- 
disturbed rest to all. . 
Note: The ladies and children of 
your household are as safe at the 
‘‘Commonwealth,’’ either with or 
without an escort, as they are in 
their own homes. 
The sanitary condition of the 
rooms and entire house is not ex- 
celled by any hotel wheresoever sit- 
uated, while the Cafe and Restaurant 
please all who patronize them. Pub- 
lic tub and shower baths on every 
floor, always kept in a condition of 
cleanliness both day and night, at 
once inviting to the most fastidious 
guest, while private baths are at- 
The World’s Greatest 
Sewing Machine 
“NEW HOME” 
Investigation will prove to you that the New 
Home Sewing Machine has acquired a name 
that is synonymous with perfection. 
best mechanical ingenuity, skill and intelli- 
gence are combined with the finest material, 
to produce the highest grade machine. 
woodwork now furnished with 
Home Family Sewing Machine is a model of 
perfection, with elegance and utility combined. 
Those who desire a sewing machine will do 
well to correspond with us, as we can give 
you valuable information. 
The 
The 
the New 
H.J.BURK E—Agent 
130 Cabot St., Beverly, Mass. 
Rogers and Chase Building 
37 
tached to 90 single rooms and en 
sulte. 
Every room in the house is heated 
by steam, under immediate control 
of the occupant, lighted by elec- 
tricity and equipped by long dis- 
tance telephone. Hot and-~ cold 
water day and night in every room 
the house contains. 
Kindly ask those who patronize 
us, or come and get a personal ex- 
perience and see if you are not glad 
to adopt ‘‘The Commonwealth”’ as 
your Boston headquarters, and tell 
us if we overstate the situation when 
we say, Over our signature, ‘‘There 
1s no cleaner, healthier, quieter or 
more cheerful hotel in the city of 
Boston, for the prices given, than 
the ‘Hotel Commonwealth’.’’ 
__If you cannot buy the Breeze at 
any newstand between Boston and 
Rockport or Ipswich let us know. 
An auto with some cottagers from 
Conomo Point, Essex, stopped in 
front of the Breeze office a few days 
ago and called for a copy of the 
Breeze. They informed us that their 
newsboy had failed to leave them a 
copy of last week’s paper. We have 
reenetly added this section of the 
North Shore to the field covered by 
the Breeze. It is suggestive of the 
history of the Breeze in the past 
seven years: Once read, always read. 
The Breeze is a very essential factor 
in North Shore life. 
The Indian says that when a man 
kills a foe the strength of the slain 
enemy passes into the victor’s arm. 
In the weird fancy lies the truth. 
Hach defeat leaves us weaker for the 
next battle, but each conquest makes 
us stronger. Nothing makes a 
prison to a human life, but a de- 
feated, broken spirit. The bird in 
its cage that sings all the while is 
not a captive. —J. R. Miller. 
What do we live for if not to 
make the world less difficult for 
each other? —George Eliot. 
Take what is; trust what may be; 
that’s life’s true lesson. 
—Robert Browning. 
FOREST WARDEN NOTICE 
This is to inform the public that I have 
been appointed sorest Warden for Man- 
chester by the Board of Selectmen, and 
I have appointed the following as my 
deputies: 
M. E. GORMAN, 
J. D. MORRISON, 
JOSEPH P. LEARY, 
A. 8. PEABODY, 
JACOB H. KITFIELD, 
0. E. LITTLEFIELD, 
3B. J. SEMONS, Forest Warden. 
