24 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
DO YOU WANT CLEAN COAL that can be depended upon 
to always run uniform? 
Do YOU want delivery in canvas bags by 
AUTO TRUCK? 
ls your home in Beverly, Beverly Farms, Wenham, Hamilton, Essex, 
\lanchester, or Magnolia? 
“Sprague, 
Tel. 280. Reverse the charge. 
Then send your orders to 
Breed & Brown 
Co. 
Beverly, Mass. 
Poultry and Game 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
The Best Quality 
Beverly Farms 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
Roses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
and Funeral Work 
Beverly Farms 
fer Decorations 
Hale Street 
Sr EY 
WENHAM 
Communion Sunday will be observ- 
ed in the village church at the morn- 
ing service by the administration of 
the sacrament, with an appropriate 
sermon by the minister, Rev. F. M. 
Cutler. Sunday schoolat noon. Y. P. 
S.C.E. at 6. A social service forum will 
be conducted at 7 under the depart- 
ment of social service, when Rev. 
Edgar Fletcher Allen will show lan- 
tern slides made by himself illustrat- 
ing social and industrial conditions in 
Ipswich. Mr. Allen’s address will 
serve to render Wenham better ac- 
quainted with her neighbor on the 
north, and will have particular bearing 
upon article 14 of the town warrant 
pertaining to accepting the “Tene- 
ment House Act.” 
Tuesday a district Sunday school 
convention will be held at the Dane 
St. church, Beverly. 
Wednesday at 4 the Ladies’ society 
will meet. A public supper will be 
served at 6. Following supper, Mrs. 
B. H. Tracy, by special request, will 
give a talk on “Glimpses of Gar- 
dening in England and on the Con- 
tinent.” 
Little of unusual interest seems 
likely to come up at town meeting 
BREWER’S MARKET 
(Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
Morning 
and Promptly Filled. 
Mass. 
J. B. Dow John ‘i. 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 Street 
Manchester Beverly Farms 
next Monday. From 6 to Io a. m. 
balloting for town officers and on the 
license question will be conducted ac- 
cording to the Australian system. 
Only routine matters are suggested 
by the warrant, excepting article 11, 
which provides for public records of 
interments in the cemetery, and arti- 
cle 14, which raises the question of 
accepting chapter 635 of the acts of 
Ig12, entitled, ‘““An Act Relative to 
Tenement Houses in Towns.” The 
Citizens’ No-License Committee has 
sent circulars to all voters, urging the 
serious importance of the license 
question. 
On town meeting day the Ladies’ 
society will serve dinner at noon for 
voters. 
SHE UNpERsSToop IT 
“What,” asked the Sunday school 
teacher, “is meant by bearing false 
witness against one’s neighbor?” 
“It’s telling falsehoods about them,” 
said one small maid. 
“Partly right, and partly wrong,” 
said the teacher. 
“T know,” said another little girl, 
holding her hand high in the air. “It’s 
when nobody did anything and some- 
body went and told about it.—Lip- 
pincott’s. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Mrs. Wm. J. Dougherty spent a part 
of this week at Union, Me., accom- 
panying Miss Harding, a Beverly 
Farms school teacher whose home is 
at that place. 
Day officer and Mrs. Calvin L. Wil- _ 
liams are justly proud over the fact 
that they are grandparents, a baby 
girl being born to their son and daugh- 
ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. 
Williams, on Washington’s birthday. 
Eli R. Hodgkins of Rockport spent 
the past week enjoying camp life in 
his cottage on the shores of Gravelly 
pond. 
Harriet B., age 84 years 3 mos. I 
day, wife of Thomas S. Poole, died 
at her late home at Riverdale the 
early part of this week. She had 
been in good health until recently. 
The loss will fall particularly heavy 
on her aged husband, who of late has 
not been very well. They have been 
married 60 years and celebrated their 
anniversary last November. The de- 
ceased was well known to many Bey- 
erly Farms people and was the mother 
of the late husband of Mrs. Abbie 
Poole of the Farms. 
Daniel Horrigan has accepted a 
year’s position as foreman mason for 
a large amount of masonry work to 
be done on the new Henry C. Frick 
estate at Hamilton (The Four Corn- 
ers). Mr. Horrigan is an expert in 
the construction of rustic stone work, 
and specimens of his skill can be seen 
on Many North Shore estates. He 
has been a valued superintendent for 
Connolly Bros. for many years. 
The marriage of Albert E. Johnson 
and Mrs. Louisa Robb, both of Man- 
chester, took place at the home of 
Rev. C. S. Pond on the 11th of this 
month. Mr. Johnson is the popular 
manager of the Smith Express Co 
office at the Farms. They will reside 
in Manchester. 
At last Monday evening’s meeting 
of the city council, another of Mayor 
MacDonald’s efforts to give the city 
economical administration and put 
Beverly on the van with progressive 
cities by consolidating the offices of 
street commissioner and city engineer, 
was killed by the same 5 to 4 vote that 
has been against the mayor’s efforts 
since the beginning of the year. 
derman Hull. the Beverly Farms rep- 
resentative, as usual, helped, with Al- 
derman Blaisdell, Brown, Lane and 
McPherson to oppose a plan that has 
merit and which the people are inter- 
ested in. 
by many only a postponement of the 
consolidation. 
Al-. 
The above action is viewed © 
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