NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
DO YOU WANT CLEAN COAL that can be depended upon 
Do YOU 
to always run uniform? 
want delivery in eanvas bags by 
AUTO TRUCK? 
Is your home in Beverly, Beverly Farms, Wenham, Hamilton, 
Then send your orders to 
Breed & Brown Co. 
Manchester, or Magnolia? 
Sprague, 
Tel. 280. 
Reverse the charge. 
Essex, 
Beverly, Mass. 
Poultry and Game 
1 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
The Best Quality 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
Beverly Farms 
Mass. 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
Beses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Cet Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
fer Decorations and Funeral Work 
Hale Street Beverly Farms 
Boston OpEeRA House 
One of the most notable weeks of 
the entire opera season will be that 
beginning Monday, Jan. 27 at the Bos- 
ton Opera House. The coming of 
Felix Weingartner, the eminent com- 
poser and pri-emient operatic conduc- 
tor of the day, who has obtained a 
brief leave of absence from the Royal 
Opera at Vienna, in order that he 
may assume charge of the orchestral 
forces in Boston, will lend especial 
distinction to the second half of the 
season which begins on Monday. Mr. 
Weingartner’s initial bow will be 
made on Friday night when Wagner’s 
great love drama and master work, 
“Tristan und Isolde” will be sung with 
Carl Burrian and Olive Fremstadt, 
both from the Metropolitan Opera 
House in the titular parts. 
Mr. Weingartner will conduct again 
at the Saturday matinee, when good 
old “Il Trovatore” with its familiar 
melodies will be sung with an ex- 
traordinarily famous cast, for as 
Azucena Mme. Ernestine Schumann- 
Heink will make her first appearance 
as a member of the Boston Opera 
Company. 
Monday evening will bring the 
farewell of Mme. Louise Edvina, a 
singer who has proved herself to be 
J. B. Dow John H. Cheever 
JAS. B. DOW & CO 
Coal and Wood 
We are now prepared to deliver 
coal at short notice to all parts of 
Manchester and Beverly Farms. 
Beach Street Hale Btreet 
Manchester Beverly Farms ; 
one of the greatest artists which the 
new season has brought. Operatic en- 
gagements in Europe compel her de- 
parture at this time and for her last 
appearance this season, Director Rus- 
sell has chosen Puccini’s “Tosca,” in 
the title role of which Mme. Edvina 
has conquered the publics of Paris 
and London. 
On Wednesday evening Verdi’s 
“Otello,” by many considered the 
greatest of all Italian operas, will be 
given its first hearing. 
Saturday night’s popular perform- 
ance will be one of Rossini’s “The 
Barber of Seville,’ a work which 
abounds in sparkling melodies and 
unctuous comedy. 
.“To Leave No Stone UnTuRNED” 
Though the phrase to “leave no 
stone unturned” is in common use 
and we hear it very frequently, not 
everybody knows how it originated. 
It is taken from “Euripides.” Poly- 
crates asked the Delphic oracle about 
some treasure buried by a general of 
Xerxes on the battlefield of Plataea. 
To discover the treasure, so the ora- 
cle said, it would be necessary to 
“turn every stone.” 
Breeze subscription, $2 a year. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Miss Barbara Daniels, who is spend- 
ing the winter in Boston, has been 
home the past week on account of 
illness. 
Members of Steamer Company 3 
and their guests, making a party of 
about 40, will go to Boston tomorrow 
afternoon for a banquet and will later 
attend the theatre. 
Today Mr. and Mrs. Willard B. 
Publicover are receiving the congratu- 
lations of their host of friends on the 
19th anniversary of their marriage. 
The Ward 6 Republican City com- 
mittee met last evening and organized 
for the year. Elmer Standley was 
elected chairman and Frank L. Wood- 
berry secretary. The various con- 
mittees to look after the details suci 
as finance, naturalization, registration, 
etc., were made up. The other mem- 
bers are:—A. P. Loring) Jr, Ga 
Watson, 2nd, H. EF. Morgan, W. B. 
Publicover, Wm. R. Brooks, Wm. 
Standley, H. P. Williams and C. F. 
Butman. x 
Michael J. Connolly well known at 
the Farms, was elected president of 
the Holy Cross club at the annual 
banquet held at Young’s hotel at Bos- 
ton this weeke Mr. Connolly grad- 
uated from Holy Cross with the class 
of 1887. S. John Connolly of the 
Farms, a member of the class of 1907, 
attended the banquet. Lieut. Gov. 
David I. Walsh was the principal 
speaker of the evening. 
Wita Mayor MacDonaLp 
Mayor MacDonald is gradually get- 
ting in touch with the different de-. | 
partments of the city. He is feeling | 
his way carefully, and considers every 
step before it is taken. 
One act of Mayor MacDonald’s | 
which should be appreciated by the 
citizens of Beverly is the prohibition | 
of unsightly signs in front of City hall. — 
It is said that he is quietly making an ~ 
investigation of the fire and-street de- — 
partments, and that certain practices — 
and methods in vogue in years gong 
by will be discontinued. 
The Mayor showed that every sec-_ 
tion of the city will receive his im= 
mediate and careful consideration by | 
his action in ordering the city electri- 
cian to place key guards on the fire 
boxes at North Beverly as soon a 
possible, and by personally making an 
watermains are now laid. 
It is understood that Mayor Mae 
Donald has many reforms in view, and” 
he intends to go about these matters 
in a careful and systematic manner. 
Beverly Times. 
