ie 
bor a Aad We Sod 
Sia Ose Rar E 
Be Rang i a ie 61 
BEVERLY FARMS. 
About $600 more is wanted to 
make up the amount for the new 
steamer for Beverly Farms. This 
amount will probably be provided 
by the passing of another appropria- 
tion order by the aldermen. 
This week the inspectors in the 
school garden contest for garden or 
yard improvement at the Farms, 
made their reports with the result 
that children who are on the final 
list from which the selection is to be 
made for the award of prizes are the 
following: Michael and Catherine 
Lyons, Charles Keegan, Cornelius 
Barry, Catherine Barry, Mary Mc- 
Tiernan, Mildred Naylor, Mary and 
Frank Resoldi, Lydia Poole, Dorothy 
Crown, Rosamond Connolly, Alfred 
and Rose Medealf and Eliu Haken- 
son. The judges, who are Mrs. R. 8. 
Bradley, chairman, Mrs. Gordon 
Bartlett and Miss Patterson, 
visit the gardens of the above chil- 
dren tomorrow forenoon and _ pass 
the final decision as to whom should 
be awarded the first and second 
prizes. Any of the above may also 
be a contestant in the whole city 
for having the best garden or mak- 
ing the greatest improvement. 
Night officer Webster K. Bray of 
the Farms beat, is enjoying his an- 
nual vacation and with his family 
has taken a camp at Little Neck, 
Ipswich, where they will enjoy them- 
selves for the next ten days. 
On Wednesday morning, Mrs. 
Michael Crown, Mrs. Forester H. 
Pierce, Mrs. Howard E. Morgan and 
Miss Eliza McKeigue started from 
Montserrat on a trolley trip which 
took them as far as York Beach, Me. 
Their return was part by train and 
part by trolley. 
The crew of the President’s yacht 
Mayflower, now anchored off West 
beach, have hired Neighbor’s hall for 
a dance and social to be given on 
next Monday evening and are in- 
viting the young people of the 
place to be their guests. Last year 
the Mayflower crew gave a similar 
affair, which was one of the most 
pleasant social events of the season. 
The big dance of the summer at 
Beverly Farms will be that in aid 
of the Beverly Farms Brass Band, 
the date of which has been set for 
Thursday, September 7th. It will be 
held in Neighbor’s hall. The boys 
are working hard to make this party 
a grand success. They are trying to 
increase their treasury to the ex- 
tent that they may purchase uni- 
forms. They have been organized 
successfully for the past two years 
and have played at various places in 
this section, with credit. Beverly 
will - 
JOHN DANIELS 
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS 
719 HALE STREET, BEVERLY FARMS 
Telephone 52 
Visit our lunchroom and ice cream parlor connected with our bakery 
Orders Will be Collected Every Morning, and Promptly Filled. 
Cream—Wholesale and Retail. 
Farms people should give them their 
support. 
ROWLEY. 
A reduction in the tax rate of 
Rowley from $11 in 1910, to $5.50 
this year, will result from the de- 
cision announced a few days ago of 
Mrs. Pauline Fenno to have all her 
personal property taxed here. Mrs. 
Fenno notified the assessors today 
that she considers Rowley as the 
town of her residence. She has a 
spacious home on Ox Hill. 
PRESIDENT WORKS HARD. 
Few men, in or out of publie office, 
ever devoted themselves more faith- 
fully to their duties than President 
Taft does to his. Even when he tra- 
vels he takes his clerks along and 
spends much of his time dictating 
correspondence, messages and vetoes, 
His staff has no easy time of it. 
The fact is, that to do anything in 
this world worth doing we must not 
stand back shivering and thinking of 
the cold and danger, but jump in 
and seramble through as well as we 
can. It will not do to be perpetually 
calculating risks and adjusting nice 
chances; it did very well before the 
flood, when a man could consult his 
friends upon an intended publication 
for 150 years, and then live to see 
his success afterwards; but at pres- 
ent a man waits, and doubts, and 
consults his brother and his particu- 
lar friends, till one day he finds that 
he is 60 years of age; that he has 
lost so much time in consulting his 
first-cousins and particular friends 
that he has no more time to follow 
their advice.—Sidney Smith. 
Read the Breeze. 
H. M. & R. E. HODGKINS 
PAALD NW EOR Ss, 
BEVERLY FARMS, 
Tel. 27-12. 
MASS. 
Lock Box 1140 
Telephone 124-3 Beverly Farms 
Boston Telephone 3416-L Back Bay 
New York and Boston Tailoring 
Company 
M. Silverberg, Prop. 
FINE CUSTOM TAILORS 
Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing a specialty. 
Stable and Livery Suits made to order. Careful 
attention to all work. Goods called for and 
delivered. 15th season Prices reasonable. 
West Street, Beverly Farms. 
F. W. VARNEY 
Apothecary 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
The Home of 
BAYOLINE 
QUININE 
Hair Tonic 
A toilet requisite which has stood the 
test of over a quarter of a century. 
FOR restoring, beautifying and pre- 
serving the hair, promoting its growth, 
preventing baldness, scurf 
and dandruff and eradicating all diseases 
of the hair and scalp. 
PRICE 50c and 75c 
removing 
Telephones 77 and 8027 
(If ene is busy call the other) 
WYATT’S MARKET 
we WEST STREET 
== BEVERLY FARMS 
i 
Meats and Provisions 
Also a Full Line of 
Choice Vegetables and Fruit in their season. 
Poultry, Fresh Eggs, Butter 
ORDERS CALLED FOR AND DELIVBRED 
