Ne Qe te ee Dt 
BEVERLY FARMS. 
The various side streets about the 
Farms have received an application 
of oil for laying the dust. 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. MeDon- 
nell of Hale street. have been enter- 
taining relatives from Providence 
during the past week. 
A gate lodge cottage is being built 
upon the estate of August P. Lor- 
ing at Pride’s Crossing. Publicover 
Bros. have the _ contract. The 
foundation is now being put in. 
A mission commences at St. Mar- 
garet’s church next Sunday. The 
coming week is for women and the 
following week for men. 
There is not much change in the 
condition of the eight months’ old 
son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Cul- 
bert of Greenwood avenue. 
Miss Alice Beek of Washington, 
D. C., is visiting friends at «the 
Farms. 
Edward Hill has gone into the au- 
tomobile supply business in Boston. 
‘““What I can’t understand,’’ said 
the light-minded person, ‘‘is why 
women should march and make 
speeches and toil for votes when they 
“could go into some parts of this 
country and buy them for a dollar 
apiece.’’—Washington Star. 
FOODS 
Prices 
THE THISSELL COMPANY 
High Grade Food Products 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
Dealers in and 
Receivers of 
Postoffice Building 
ERR KE KKRKES: PD DDPDDD DPMP l PPIs POs 
Since You Must Have Food — 
Our Stock of PURE 
is the LARGEST and BEST on the North Shore. 
Why not have the best? 
to roast you in the summer to make good. 
Right—Service the Best. 
St Oey tii 
BURT BSEVZ E 63 
‘Doing ’’ Uncle Sam. 
The cunning and finesse shown by 
people who wish to defraud the 
Government of revenue duties is re- 
markable. New York importers 
have been especially successful at 
this game, and the extent of their 
operations may be gauged by the 
fact that they were made to hand 
over millions of dollars for duties 
they had dodged. The Italian lemon 
importers are the latest to have been 
circumvented, but the Government 
had to revise the regulations for the 
importation of lemony in order to 
head them off, and it took eight 
months to find out how to meet the 
ease. Aided by an almost unlimited 
‘‘slush fund’’ put up by the Sicilian 
lemon growers, and by very shrewd 
and resourceful lawyers who are 
spending money lavishly to buy 
magazine and newspaper space, the 
Italian importers are now seeking to 
have the tariff revised in their in- 
terest. This is not the first time 
foreign interests have tried to shape 
legislation in Congress, but it is one 
of the boldest. Meanwhile, the only 
thing that keens lemons cheap is the 
competition of the home-grown ar- 
ticle, which is reallv better than the 
Sicilian. 
Do you read the Breeze regularly? 
We have. it! 
Our Success 
Cyrus Curtis, the publisher of the 
Ladies’ Home Journal and the Sat- 
urday Evening Post, tells about a 
beautiful statuesque blond who had 
left New York to act as stenogra- 
pher to a dignified Philadelphian of 
(Quaker descent. On the morning of 
her first appearance she went 
straight to the desk of her employer. 
‘‘T presume,’’ she remarked, ‘‘ that 
you begin the day over here the 
same as they do in New York?’’ 
**Oh, yes,’’ replied the employer 
without glancing up from a letter he 
was reading. 
‘‘Well, hurry up and kiss me, 
then,’’ was the startling rejoinder, 
“‘T want to get to work.’’—Human 
Life. 
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 
A SQUARE DEAL TO ALL, FULL WEIGHT AND MEASURE. 
Our business is good twelve months in the year, hence we do not have 
We invite comparison. 
If you want something 
good, try us 
