Red Cross Meeting. 
‘ The fourth annual meeting of the 
American National Red Cross, Massa- 
chusetts branch, willbe held in Boston, 
at the Twentieth Century ‘club, 4 Joy 
street, on Tuesday, November 17, at 3 
o'clock. 
The State officers will be elected by 
“delegates from the County and Metro- 
politan divisions, (one delegate to repre- 
~ sent every hundred members.) Reports 
will be read and any business transacted 
that may be brought before the meeting. 
As some of the business is very import- 
ant, a large attendance is hoped for. 
KATHERINE P. Lorine, 
Secretary. 
Hollis Street Theatre. 
One ef the most important events of 
the present theatrical season will be the 
annual Boston engagement, beginning 
next Monday evening, November 16, at 
ROBERT EDESON — 
AT THE HOLLIs STREET ‘THEATRE, Boston 
- the Hollis Street theatre, of Robert Ede- 
son, always a favorite, whom Henry B. 
Harris will present in the successful new 
' play, “‘ The Call of the North,’’ which 
comes here direct from the Hudson 
Theatre, New York City, where it en- 
_ joyed a prosperous engagement and ad- 
ded considerably to the popular star’s 
laurels. 
Based on Stewart Edward White’s 
widely read novel, ‘‘Conjuror’s House,”’ 
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H SHORE BREEZE 
NSSSESSTSSESee 033SSSSSSSSFz 
pen of George Broadhurst, author of 
The Happiest Hours of Life & 
Are of, andin the Home W 
And these joys are multiplied when the surround- 
ings carry with them 2 comfort that ministers to the \ 
weary body and a beauty that charms the eye. Is it \G 
any wonder that we feel our task so deeply, and try WY 
by every art we know to have you buy good things? W 
Cake 
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top has four pieces of crotch veneer, so perfectly \Jy 
matched and so well fitted to the top that you'll al- Wy 
most believe the tree grew for the table or that the 
table was made to eae de use these veneers. - \i/ 
It is a good sized table 4 feet by 2 and one-half, W 
with a drawer and a shelf that make it real practical. \ 
It wouldn't be made better if it cost double the money, \J 
and we consider it cheap \ 7 
fit (Be £5.00 W/ 
For ’tis eT -Eought for a season, a year or a life- W/ 
time; ‘twill last to please others that follow after you. \ 4 
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“The Call of the North,’’ from the one of the most appealing roles which 
the actor has yet created. 
and other 
‘©The Man of the Hour’ 
genuine dramatic successes, is a virile 
drama of the vigorous life in the silent 
vastness of the great northern forests, its 
action transpiring in the picturesque and 
seldom penetrated wilderness of the his- 
toric Hudson Bay territory in uppermost 
Canada—some six hundred miles beyond 
the borders of civilization---a region ripe 
in romance and primitiveness and new 
of reproduction behind the _footlights. 
Its well conceived and cleverly developed 
plot deals with the love and adventures 
of Ned Trent, a young American who, 
as played by Mr. Edeson, is said to be 
A Feature of the North Shore. 
In renewing her subscription to the 
Breeze a well known member of our 
North Shore summer colony writes: 
‘I congratulate you on the Breeze. 
It has become quite a feature of the 
North Shore, Ithink, and is read with 
interest by more people than possibly you 
realize. | hope its future will prove a 
continuation of its success in the past,— 
gaining strength as it goes. ‘Truly yours, 
etc.’’ 
Breeze advertising pays. 
