Sadie 
< 
BEVERLY FARMS 
VS 
(Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Powers of 
Athol have been among this week’s 
visitors at Beverly Farms. 
- The North Shore club will hold a 
‘dance in Neighbor’s hall on Thurs- 
day evening, Oct. 8th. 
_ Former Mayor Chas. H. Trowt is 
the latest to get an automobile. He 
thas just become the owner of a Ford 
touring car. 
_ Frank A. Williams and family 
have moved back into their home, the 
Hodgkins cottage, on Hale st., which 
‘they have rented for the past two 
months. 
The Beverly-Beverly Farms auto 
bus has not been run for over a week. 
The Farms people have now got so 
used to the poor service that they 
have hardly missed it. 
Mayor MacDonald has caused a 
- fine new style arc light to be located 
- in the square, in front of the Beverly 
Farms depot, a spot that was particu- 
jarly dark and much traveled. The 
_ improvement is much appreciated. 
Miss Mary Corrigan, one of the 
operators at the Manchester telephone 
exchange, substituted at the Farms 
exchange last Friday and Saturday 
in the absence of Miss Lillian Merrill, 
who was on her vacation. 
Beverly Farms people should be in- 
terested and give their aid, even in a 
small way, towards the benefit which 
is to be held on the estate of Robert 
S. Bradley for the “Red Cross” on 
Tuesday, Oct. 6th. The Beverly 
Farms Band will give their services 
and a large party of Beverly Farms 
young ladies will also aid toward the 
success of the affair. 
; Work, which has been going’ on 
during the past weeks, looked after by 
the Beverly Farms Branch of the 
Improvement Society, in having men 
out cleaning up the rubbish, paper, 
etc., along the streets, will probably 
stop for this year on Oct Ist. This 
has indeed been a great improvement 
and much appreciated by all who take 
pleasure in keeping things clean. It 
is suggested that if all property 
owners along the streets will do their 
little part in keeping things clean 
along their respective frontage, it 
will be a great help towards making 
Pride’s and Beverly Farms’ places of 
increased pleasure to live in. 
: REAL ESTATE 
Abigail C. Tibbetts of Rockport 
conveys to Philip Dexter of Man- 
chester two and one-half acres land 
on Gloucester boundary line in Man- 
chester. This property joins the Dex- 
ter estate. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
19 
See a 
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MANCHESTER SEA FOOD CO. 
F. H. DENNIS, Manager 
Residence, No. 5 Lincoln Street 
Tel. 296M 
ALL KINDS OF SEA FOOD 
Fresh - Smoked - Salted - Canned 
Market, 48 Beach Street 
Tel. 188W 
Edward §. Knight 
FLORIST 
Everything for the Garden. 
Flowers for all occasions 
ESTABLISHED 1884 
40 SCHOOL STREET 
Tel. 10 
MANCHESTER 
The most destructive of recent pests to 
shade trees of New England. 
We 
successfully combat this insect. 
R. E. HENDERSON & CO. 
Beverly, - - - - 
The Leopard Moth Larva 
have men _ especially trained to 
Foresters-Entomologists 
Mass, 
ANTI-SUFFRAGE NOTES 
BY MRS. HENRY PRESTON WHITE 
Anti-suffragists are at a loss to un- 
derstand the wild acclaim which the 
suffrage workers have been making 
over their “victory” in the New York 
republican convention, which hardy 
seem borne out by the non-partisan 
newspaper comments. The Troy 
Times, in commenting on the conven- 
tion said, among other things :— 
“Probably the woman suffragists 
are dissappointed, probably those who 
were joining together in dissimilar 
union direct primaries and increased 
power for the Governor are dissap- 
pointed, and others may have felt the 
tooth of frost-bite on their hopes; but 
those who believe in Republicanism 
as a declaration of principles justified 
by experience, and who hope to see 
the new Constitution a symmetrical 
chart for state policies and not a 
crazy-work quilt of individual fan- 
cies, are very well satisfied with what 
was done at Saratoga.” 
Massachusetts anti-suffrage work- 
ers are curious now as to how soon 
they will hear of the returns from the 
suffrage melting-pot. Judging from 
the preliminary reports it must be a 
veritable treasure trove by this time, 
and the delay in announcing the gains 
is rather confusing. There will not 
of course be any need to make any 
new appeals for money. That is pro- 
viding the stories sent out were true. 
If they were not true, it is a fair in- 
quiry how they can morally explain 
such misrepresentations. The whole 
melting-pot scheme begins to look like 
something that was wished for but 
did not happen, notwithstanding the 
wedding rings contributed. 
Miss Minnie Bronson, General 
Secretary of the National Association 
Opposed to Woman Suffrage, has 
written to the Massachusetts Anti- 
Suffrage officials predicting that the 
seven states to vote on suffrage this 
fall will turn it down. 
A school principal elevated by the 
slogan that votes for women would 
mean the cessation of all wars has 
been rather rudely shocked by the at- 
titude of the young girls under his 
charge. “I have talked to them and 
asked them not to read about the bat- 
tles in their text books,” he said, “but 
almost invariably they say, ‘Why, the 
wars are the most interesting part of 
the whole book; if we had to omit 
that it would be suuch a dry sub- 
tect.27' 
Why not patronize a local institu- 
tion with your printing? 
Everybody reads the Breeze. 
