2 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
G A. KNOERR, Betta Contact 
Electrical Wiring, Telephones, Bell Systems and Fixtures 
Agent for the SANTO ELECTRIG VYACGUUM GLEANER, the latest improve- 
ment. For Sale or for Rent. 
Rowe’s Block, Central Square, TEL.—OFFICE 53-2 RES. 
JEWELRY OF MERIT AT LITTLE COST. © 
For those who admire expensive jewelry, but who do not have the 
means to buy jewelry of that class, this store’s stocks provide bountifully. 
Jewelry-making science and art have made it possible for everybody to 
own beautiful and substantial jewelry in rolled plate and gold filled goods that 
will endure for years 
This class of jewelry when purchased from a house of absolute trust- 
worthiness is recommended as economical and satisfactory. 
F. S. THOMPSON, Jeweler, 184 “A! STREET 
GLOUCESTER 
16-14 [Tlanchester, [las 
Highland Nursery 
(4,000 ft. elevation in the Carolina Mts.) 
The Largest collection of Hardy American Plants in the World. 
The Finest Evergreen 
GROUND COVERS 
Andromeda floribunda Leucothoe catesbaei 
Galax aphylla. Mitchella repens and others 
Best Plants for Rhododendron Beds 
Catalogs Telephone or Write 
HARLAN P. KELSEY, Owner, 
Empire Theatre Bldg., 
SALEM, MASS. 
Telephone Salem 820 
Manufacturer’s Cut Price on Sewing Machines 
Do not spend from $45.00 to $60.00 
when you can buy one from us and 
save from 15 per cent. to 33 per cent. 
DON’T GO TO BOSTON 
let the Dealer's Commmission stay in 
your Pocket. We guarantee to save 
you just as this ad reads. 
Sewing Machines from 
$16.00 to $35.00 
Price $35.00, Terms 
Eastern M’f'g Sales M’gr. Domestic Goodrich New Model. 
130 Cabot St., Rogers & Chase Building, Beverly, Mass. 
GLOUCESTER. 
Captain Freeman Haughn of the 
local Salvation Army Corps has been 
promoted to Ensign and has been 
transferred to New York. 
Mr. and Mrs. George Crosman and 
daughter, Augusta, of Essex avenue, 
have gone to Nova Seotia, where 
they were called by the illness of 
Mr. Crosman’s father. 
Hon. Sylvanus Smith and party in- 
eluding Mrs. E. Archer Bradley and 
Miss Ethel Bradley, have returned 
from a trip to Panama and the Ber- 
muda Islands. 
A large audience enjoyed a pre- 
sentation of the farce, ‘‘Snowball’’ 
in the vestry of the Universalist 
ehurch, last evening, by local talent. 
Miss Bertha Corbiey, an operator 
in the Western Union Telegraph of- 
fice on Pleasant street, met with a 
peculiar accident Wednesday in 
passing out of the post office. In 
checking the swing of one of the 
doors, her hand was pushed through 
the glass, cutting her wrist in sev- 
eral places. Fortunately no veins 
or arteries were cut. 
Ralph Dodge of Beverly, who has 
eonducted the pavilion at Long 
Beach for several years, has re- 
newed the lease for a term of five 
years. 
Miss Gladys W. Herrick of Clif- 
tondale, is on a week-end visit 
with her sister, Miss Helen B. Her- 
rick of Western avenue. 
James Hyams, proprietor of the 
Surfside Hotel, who has been con- 
ducting the Cambridge on Beacon 
street, Boston, during the winter, 
was in town this week. He expects 
to open the Surfside early in June. 
EAST GLOUCESTER 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Osborne 
have arrived at the Harbor View ho- 
tel. They are getting the house in 
readiness for the annual visitation 
of the New England é¢ollege girls. 
Large parties of collegians spend 
the spring vacation there, likewise 
at The Rockaway, and the Pilgrim 
House, Rocky Neck. These three 
hostelries inaugurate their seasons 
at the advent of the collegians. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Lilley of New 
York, are returning to the Harring- 
ton cottage, 252 Kast Main street, 
again this season. 
Ex. Rept. Alphonso Davis of Mt. 
Pleasant avenue, is in Boston daily, 
as a member of the jury at the 
United States court. 
Send your orders for printing to 
the Breeze office, 171 Main street. 
Delivered when promised, 
