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NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
39 
BEVERLY FARIS. 
Last Monday a small Farms boy 
went down to play at the Beverly 
Farms play ground (so-called). He 
got off that part which had been filled 
in and got stuck in the mud and 
water, sinking to above his waist. 
His cries brought help, who got some 
planks and boards and pulled him out. 
John Day, the young son of Mr. 
and Mrs. E. Fred Day, was at the 
Beverly hospital a portion of this 
week, where a successful operation 
for swollen glands was performed. 
Maurice Silverburg and _ family 
moved to the Farms this week. They 
will stay here until late in the fall as 
usual. Mr. Silverburg conducts a 
tailoring store on West street, which 
he has opened for the season. 
Miss Carrie Davis, assistant at the 
Farms postoffice, accompanied by the 
Misses Agnes and Alice Leahy, spent 
the past week on a vacation trip to 
the national capitol. 
Charles Petrie, of Beverly, has ac- 
cepted a position at the Leiter estate. 
Mr. Petrie has leased one of the tene- 
ments in the Joseph Stanwood (Has- 
kell) house on Vine street, and will 
shortly move his family into it. 
The Beverly Farms firemen have 
for sale, at ten cents each, stick-pin 
buttons inscribed as follows: “Bev- 
erly Firemen’s Relief Association, 
Field Day, June 17th 1911.” This 
method of securing funds to help pay 
expenses for that day is thought will 
result in the securing of quite a 
goodly sum. 
Miss Jennie Hanson has been: sub- 
stituting at the Farms postoffice the 
past week, for Miss Carrie Davis. 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Wade, of 
Norwich, Conn., spent the past week 
with friends at the Farms. ; 
The funeral services of Mrs. Ade- 
laide, wife of George Henry Wyatt, 
took place last Sunday afternoon 
from her late residence on Hart 
street, the pastor of the Farms 
Baptist church officiating. Besides 
friends and neighbors, the Preston 
WRC were present in a body. The 
ritual burial service was read. ‘The 
pall bearers were Eben Day, Elmer 
Stanley, Ezra P. Williams and Benja- 
min Osborne. A quartet sang “Some 
Day the Silver Cord Will Break”; 
“Abide With Me” and “Some Day 
We'll Understand.” Among __ the 
beautiful floral offerings was a wreath 
from John West colony, Pilgrim Fa- 
thers. Interment was in the Farms 
cemetery. 
Mrs. William Wallace has the 
sympathy of her Farms friends in the 
loss of her father, who died this week 
at Hamilton. 
TEL. 150 BrvERLY Farms, 
THE THISSELL CO. 
If you do not eat you cannot live. 
PostoFFIcE Brock. 
PURE FOODS 
Which is the cheapest >— 
cheap food, sickness and doctor’s bills, or pure food, good health 
and happiness. 
most neglected, — your food. 
you money and worry. 
The most important thing in all your life is the 
Our stock is complete. 
Lhy. US: 
We can save 
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. 
Joseph Hessions has leased one of 
the apartments in the new Fanning 
house, corner of Haskell and High 
streets. Mr. Hessions is chauffeur at 
the Spaulding estate at Prides. 
Much interest is being shown by 
the Farms people in the progress of 
the new pavilion -at West Beach. 
Many visitors visit the beach to see 
how the work is progressing. ‘The 
building is rapidly being erected and 
on-lookers can get a pretty good idea 
of how it is going to look. 
Tickets are now on sale at the price 
of 50 and 35 cents by the members of 
the Beverly Farms Athletic Club for 
the “Big Night” Minstrel show and 
dance, which takes place in Neigh- 
bors hall on the evening of May toth. 
The event promises to be exception- 
ally good.and no doubt will be wit- 
nessed by a large audience. 
Rumor has it that quite a large 
portion of the land on the Linehan 
property adjoining the tracks has 
been sold to the B. & M. R. R. fora 
freight yard. It has been understood 
for some time that the R. R. company 
contemplated changes in their local 
freight yard, the present one being too 
small. 
A new building, quite a large one, 
is being built by Mrs. Lawrence W. 
King on her estate at Pride’s Crossing 
—just across from the depot—which 
it is understood has been leased by 
out-of-town parties for a barber shop. 
H. M. & R. E. HODGKINS, 
PFATIGN SERS, 
BEVERLY FARMS, MASS. 
Tel. 27-12. Lock Box 1140 
MATTIS HANSON 
HORSESHOER and JOBBER 
Special attention given to lame, interferin 
and overreaching horses. Jobbing done with 
neatness and despatch. Gentlemen’s light 
driving horses a specialty. 
Vine Court, 
Beverly Farms, Mass 
EVV sag tt gel ON NG 
Sale, Boarding and Livery Stables 
SADDLE Horses To LET. 
All Styles of Carriages For Sale or Exchange 
Tel. Con. Vine Court, BEVERLY FARMS 
F. W. VARNEY 
APOTHECARY 
BEVERLY FARMS, -:- MASS. 
Telephones 77 and 8027 
(If one is busy call the other) 
Use V. V. V. for chapped hands 
and roughness of the skin 
“Now odors sweet of new-mown hay, 
And of crab-apple blooms in May; 
Of shining furrows freshly tilled, 
Alnd of pink clover honey filled!’ 
WYATT’S MARKET 
WEST STREET 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Meats and Provisions 
Also a Full Line of 
Choice Vegetables and Fruit in their season. 
Poultry, Fresh Eggs, Butter 
ORDERS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED 
