a 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Real Estate and Improvements 
..- Up and Down the North Shore... 
It is understood that the property 
of Messrs. Wyatt and Trowt on Hart 
street, Beverly Farms, consisting of 
quite an area of land and a barn, was 
sold this week to an agent acting for 
the present holder of nearby property. 
This property is located on the Bey- 
erly Farms-Wenham road. 
Ground has been broken and con- 
siderable stonework has already been 
laid up for a large green house for 
Quincy A. Shaw at Pride’s Crossing, 
located on land adjoining Hale street 
and near the entrance to the H. C. 
Frick estate. 
a a RR 
GWENDOLEN Froyp As GERTRUDE R. LEAD 
Acts I, II, I11—1860, 1885, 1912 Milestones, now playing at Tremont Thea- 
tre, Boston. 
In THE Cycrone BELT 
“T tell you what,” said Gotham, en- 
tertaining his western cousin, “every- 
thing is so high here it’s almost im- 
possible to keep a house going.” 
“Well,” replied ‘the Kansan, «the 
winds are so high out our way it’s 
almost impossible to keep a house 
from going.”—Catholic Standard and 
Times. 
SALEM NURSERIES 
(Branch of Highland Nurseries, 4,000 ft elevation in Carolina Mts. ) 
Beautiful Gardens and Home Grounds. 
The choicest Evergreens, Rhododendrons, Azaleas 
and Flowering 
Shrubs are always used in gardens laid out by us. 
Specimen stock that produces permanent results rather than LOW 
PRICES. 
Better do a little gardening well than a big garden poorly... 
Beautiful Catalogs, or call at Nursery on Marblehead Road, or office. 
Telephone Salem 820 
HARLAN P. KELSEY, Owner, 
287 Essex Street, 
SALEM, MASS. 
BostQn THEATRE 
It happens often that when a book 
has been dramatized, its presentation 
on the stage causes the audience to 
look with interest at the name of the 
author and inquire, ‘““What else has he 
written?” and there follows a wild 
demand for his books that makes his 
popularity look like a contagion. This 
will not be the case with ‘The Gar- 
den of Allah.” “Who,” the audien- 
‘ce will ask, “is the great genius that 
saw the possibilities for such an amaz- 
ing spectacular production in such a 
book? Who read this book and saw 
between the lines the opprtunity for 
producing the greatest scenic play the 
stage has ever known?” “The Gar- 
den of Allah” as a book, is the foun- 
dation on which has been built a play 
that every one shuld see, and when 
they see it, they will go away marvel- 
ling at the wnderful edifice some ar- 
chitect of the spectacular has erected. 
It is a series of marvelous visions, the 
like of which has never been produced 
on any stage. 
Those who see “The Garden of Al- 
lah” at the Boston Theatre and this 
will include all theatregoers, will car- 
ry away with them scenes of stretches 
of the desert, of sand storms, of the 
life of the mysterious Arab, and, 
above ail, a longing to some day go 
there and learn of the spell of the 
Sahara for one’s self. 
The horny-handed son of toi! who 
had just inherited a fortune went to 
see a manicure. 
“Can you do anything with these 
ma’am?” he asked, exhibiting his 
hands. 
“Yes, sir,” she said, ‘after you’ve 
gone to a surgeon and had those cracks 
stitched up. I don’t meddle with jobs 
that belong to the regular practition- 
ers.” —Tit-Bits. 
“Brother Hardesty, can’t you make 
your contribution for the education of 
the heathen a little larger than usual 
this year?” 
“Dr. Goodman, I’m more than dou- 
bling it; I have just started that 
youngest boy of mine to college.” 
“My favorite football team,” com- 
plained the gridiron enthusiast, “‘is 
losing right along this season.” 
“Well,” said the baseball enthusiast, 
“it is always better to do your losing 
early in the season.” 
“T know that axiom goes good in 
baseball, but we’ve got such a darn 
short season.” 
Modern young men court in haste 
and repent at leisure. 
wy 
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