58 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
OUR ANNUAL JULY SALE 
Women’s New _ Wash Dresses 
at Saving of 1-3 and more 
Hundreds of new, practical Summer Dresses in all the new 
popular warm weather materials are offered in this sale at 
remarkably low prices. 
$7.50 Marquisette one-piece Dresses $3.98 
$3.00 & $4.00 Gingham and Percale Dresses $2:98 
We Solicit Charge Accounts 
Open Thursday and Saturday Evenings . 
Have you visited the Biddle Baking 
Company’s “Little Bake Shop”? 
181-183 Essex Street, SALEM, Mass. 
When we have more 
time we will tell you all 
about it. Please do not 
wait for us— come and 
see for yourself. 
Bakers, Confectioners. Dealers in 
Ice Cream and Soda. Lunch Room 
in. the Rear. 
BEVERLY FARMS. 
Night patrolman Webster K. Bray 
of the Farms beat, has rented a eot- 
tage at Little Neck, Ipswich,” for 
use during his two weeks’ vacation, 
which he is to enjoy next month. 
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Morse of - 
St. Albans, Vt., are visiting friends 
at the Farms. 
Mrs. Abbie Marshall continues to 
enjoy camp life at her cottage on 
the Annisquam river, Gloucester. 
This week she had_ her grand- 
daughter and grandson, Miss Helen’ 
and Marshall Campbell, with her. 
Richard Carr has accepted posi- 
tion as night watchman on a summer 
estate at Pride’s Crossing. 
Unclaimed letters remaining at 
the Beverly Farms post office July 
12: Mr. G. L. Andrews, Miss Mary 
M. McCabbery, Miss Mae Cumme- 
ford, Miss A. Duffy, Miss Mary E. 
Day, Miss Margaret Daley, Miss May 
Cranely, M. Hegarty, Sidney Hook 
Leaha, Lunt Morr Co., Miss Anna 
Quinn, Miss Enis Roose, Mr. Chas. 
W. Scott, Master Frank Thomas, E. 
H. White, Mr. J. B. Waterbury, Mr. 
John Williams. William R. Brooks, 
Postmaster. 
B. F. Keith’s Theatre. 
Unquestionably the biggest event 
in vaudeville in recent years is an- 
nounced for B. F. Keith’s Theatre 
next week in ‘‘The Meistersinger 
All Star Minstrels,’’ which will be 
put on in the style for which Mr. 
Keith has become famous, with the 
greatest organization of soloists, 
minstrel endmen, and _ musicians, 
that has ever been brought together. 
In ‘‘The Meistersingers,’’ who have 
been for four weeks the leading 
feature at B. F. Keith’s, there is 
the greatest combination of male 
voices that has ever been in a min- 
strel circle, and the end men will 
number four, whose names are 
known the width and breadth of the 
land. They will be George Thatcher, 
of Thatcher, Primrose & West Min- 
strels, the famous Lew Benedict, 
Hughie Dougherty, the great Phila- 
delphia minstrel, and John Healy, 
who has been specially engaged 
from Al G. Fields’ Western Min- 
strels, for this occasion. The inter- 
locutor will be Harry W. Morse, late 
of Cohan & Harris’ and Lew Dock- 
stader’s Minstrels. There will be 
over fifty people on the stage, the 
biggest circle ever shown. The boys 
and girls of the present generation, 
who have never seen a real old style 
minstrel show, should be brought to 
see these famous artists and com-. 
pany of great singers. 
