18 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
BEVERLY FARMS 
A seven room cottage is being built 
on the Robt. S. Bradley property, 
formerly Dow’s greenhouse property, 
for Mr. Bradley’s superintendent, 
Wm. G. Canning. Howard A. 
Doane is the contractor. 
Joseph A. Connolly, a well known 
and popular Beverly Farms man, who 
has followed the occupation of car- 
penter, is to go into business for him- 
self and has leased the room in 
Neighbors hall formerly occupied by 
the Green Box Library which he will 
use for an office. Mr. Connolly’s 
line will be the selling and renting of 
vacuum cleaners, framing of pic- 
tures, and light repairing. 
Edwin F. Campbell, proprietor of 
the Central Square Garage, has taken 
over the quarters recently vacated by 
Publicover Bros., the carpenters, and 
will use all the space to accommodate 
Mr. Campbell’s increasing garage 
business. The office quarters used 
by Publicover Bros., has now become 
Mr. Campbell’s office. 
BUSINESS 
PAPER 
The Beverly National 
Bank discounts busi- 
ness paper at reason- 
able rates, with prefer- 
ence given to depositors. 
Come in and talk it 
over. 
Beverly 
National Bank 
A. W. Rogers, President 
J. R. Pope, Vice Fresident 
E. S. Webber, Cashier 
FE: C. 
Painting and Varnishing 
218-236 Rantoul Street, Cor. Bow Street $3 
SAWYER 
Established 1877 
CARRIAGE AND AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING 
NEW COVERINGS, TOPS and SLIP LININGS for AUTOMO- 
BILES. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALTERATIONS 
Special Department for Automobiles 
First-Class Work 
BEVERLY 
Telephone: Factory 158-M Residence 449-W 
“One good turn deserves another” 
is the popular feeling in Ward 6, as 
regards Mayor Herman A _ Mac- 
Donald, who seeks re-election, and 
indications point to his getting the 
largest vote in his home Ward, Bev- 
erly Farms, ever given a candidate 
with the possible exception of that 
given Charles H. Trowt for mayor, a 
few years ago. 
The annual Christmas tree and en- 
tertainment given by the Sunday 
School of the Beverly Farms Baptist 
church will be held at the chapel on 
Christmas Eve, commencing at 6 
o’clock. The Christmas Concert will 
be held the Sunday evening before 
the holiday. 
Next Tuesday is election day for 
Mayor and other Municipal officers. 
The Ward 6 voters will vote, as us- 
ual, in G. A. R. hall. The polls open 
at 6 a. m. and close at 4 p. m. 
City ELECTION 
City election will be held Tues- 
day, Dec. 15th. The following is the 
list of candidates from which the 
Ward 6 voter will make his selection: 
For Mayor 
Herman A. MacDonald ts 
Willard O. Wylie 
James McPherson 
For ALDERMAN-AT-LARGE 
Roland B. Lindsay 
George H. Hurd 
Louis $. Smith 
George W. McNutt 
George H. Leonard 
George F. Goldthwait 
John C. Kelliher 
For ALDERMAN, WARD 6 
William Watt 
Caleb Loring 
The only contest for school com- 
mittee is in Ward 1, where Francis 
G. Stanley and A. Scott Fraser op- 
pose each other. 
Letters remaining unclaimed at 
Beverly Farms, Mass., P. O., Dec. 7, 
1914:—Miss Mary Callahan, Mrs. J. 
Doyle, Leslie Camble, Esq., Madame 
Goodrow, Mr. James Ginty, Mr. 
HAVE YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS 
FILLED AT 
DELANEY’S 
Apothecary 
Cabot and Abbott Streets 
BEVERLY 
We keep everything that a good 
drug store should keep. 
Cor. 
Telephone Connection 
S. A. GENTLEE & SON 
Funeral Directors and Embalmers 
Calls answered day or night 
277 Cabot Street + 
Residence, 16 Butman St. BE\ k RL‘ 
Chas, W. Kelley, Mr. Arthur Haskell, 
Walter Hayes, Mrs. S. A. Weldon.— 
Lawrence Watson, P. M. 
War PIctTuRES AT THE Boston 
At the exhibition of the Belgian 
War Motion Pictures at the Boston 
Theatre this week there has been a 
series of spell-bound audiences, who 
have followed the graphic delinea- 
tions of war with breathless interest. 
There are pictures of infantry in 
action, of the artillery fire, of soldiers 
falling and comrades pulling them 
from the trenches, and of Red Cross 
workers helping the wounded, Bel- 
gian and German alike, after the 
battle. There are refugees, thousands 
of them, ever present hurrying from 
the advancing Germans, and then miles 
of ruined cities and villages and sheil 
furrowed roads. Burning cities, 
broken and ruined bridges, soldiers 
and citizens lying dead, side. by side, 
also have been caught on Mr. Weigle’s 
film. There are 4,500 feet of film 
divided into four reels. The pictures 
show the battles of Alost, of Lierre, 
of Aerschot, of Malines, and the fail 
of Antwerp. Here is war in all its 
terror and destruction. 
_Exhibtions are given every hour ~ 
from II a, m. to II p. m. ee 
