: BEVERLY FARMS 
b | —EEE———— 
3 John McTiernan and Alfred Med- 
calf are the latest Beverly Farms boys 
to attend the 
- school. 
_ Lawrence J. Watson, 2nd, and 
_ Joseph Donovan have been in Wash- 
- ington this week during the inaugura- 
tion. 
_ Among those from the Farms who 
attended the hearing at the State 
house, Boston, Wednesday before the 
legislative committee on cities, on the 
amendment which provides for the 
election of Ward aldermen-at-large, 
after the plan now in use for the 
election of the school committee, were 
_ the following: Mayor McDonald, who 
was the principal speaker in favor, 
_ former alderman A. P. Loring, Jr., 
Robert E. Hodgkins, ex-mayor Trowt 
and Wm. R. Brooks. ‘There were 
_ speakers both in favor and against 
_ the chance. 
Peter Ward is fitting up the vacant 
_ store in the Pierce block on West 
street which he will occupy in about 
two weeks. Mr. Ward conducts a 
lunch and bakery business and plans 
_ to have his new quarters a model one. 
Officer Calvin L. Williams is one 
_ of the committee on arrangements for 
_ the first annual concert and ball for 
_ the benefit of the Beverly Police Re- 
lief association, to be given at the City 
hall Friday night, April 18th. 
Miss Alice G. Coombs of Wilming- 
ton, Del., has been visiting friends at 
_ the Farms the past week. 
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin R. Goodwin 
of Bridgeport, Conn., have been among 
_ those from out of town who spent the 
past week at Beverly Farms. 
Former Councilman George E. 
Johnson and Miss Helen Johnson are 
_ at Jacksonville, Fla., for the next two 
weeks. 
_ The fifth in the course of free en- 
_tertainments at the school hall will be 
given this evening at 7.45 o'clock. 
Henry L. Mason of Boston, a well- 
known summer resident and one of 
the firm of Mason & Hamlin, will lec- 
ture on “The Modern Artistic Piano- 
forte and its Construction.” ‘The Bev- 
_ erly Farms band will give a concert 
_ before the lecture. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest ‘l‘ownsend 
(Margaret Lawlor) moved into one 
of the apartments in the Bennett block 
this week. 
Notices for the collection of ashes 
for 1913 and 1914 in the Beverly 
Farms district have been circulated 
this week. The collections will be 
made on Wednesday as heretofore. 
_ F, I, Lomasney has the contract, 
Beverly Industrial 
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NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
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THE THISSELL COMPANY 
High Grade Food Products 
Two Phones, 150 and 151 
| Post Office Building - 
Next Tuesday evening the Girls’ 
club of the local Baptist church will 
hold a surprise party in the chapel. 
The affair is being looked forward to 
with much pleasure. 
John West colony, Pilgrim Fathers, 
will hold its regular semi-monthly 
meeting in Marshall’s hall this even- 
ing. It is very probable that some new 
members will be initiated. 
Work on the second floor of Mar- 
shall’s hall which O. W. Holmes 
Council, K. of C., has leased was start- 
ed this week. There are to be many 
repairs and alterations made for the 
comfort of the members. ‘The rooms 
will be open for sociability at all times. 
Fittings will be installed to make the 
quarters attractive. 
Preston W. R. C. will send a good 
representation next Wednesday to the 
Essex County convention which meets 
in Haverhill. 
Mrs. James Kerrigan of High street 
returned from the Beverly hospital this 
week after three weeks’ treatment. 
James Jack age 68 years, 5 months, 
passed away Wednesday at his late 
home 25 Vine street. He moved to 
Beverly Farms about two years ago 
and has made many friends here, who 
will miss him greatly. He leaves a 
son with whom he made his home. 
Funeral services were held at his late 
home at noon today. Interment was 
made at the Mt. Hope cemetery, Bos- 
ton. 
The New York Sun the other day 
told about a novelist wanting local 
color for his story and wanting it ac- 
curate, who went to great pains to 
find out on which side of Salem is its 
famous tunnel. He questioned rail- 
road men who should have known and 
even got “Pennsy” to ask the Boston 
& Maine. According to the story he 
vas finally informed that the tunnel 
was between the Salem station and 
Boston and the author and the Sun 
believed it, and the Sun printed it un- 
der the head of “Accuracy in Fiction.” 
This is calculated to amuse the Sa- 
lemites and everybody else who knows 
where the tunnel! is.—Lowell Cowurier- 
Citison. 
To be really disappointed in love it 
is necessary to have been married at 
least once, 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
If one is busy call the other. 
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F. W. Varney 
Apothecary -:- Beverly Farms 
Can supply you PROMPTLY 
with any goods usually carried in 
stock by a first-class pharmacy 
Our Prescription Department is 
constantly under the personal su- 
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PHARMACY of long experience 
Telephones 
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Eureka 
larness 
Seld ed. oy coahaee ey 
Standard O1] Co. of Rew York 
A Cleveland man who makes a prac- 
tice of choosing his words with care, 
a practice which he has endeavored to 
instill into the family circle, made a 
memorandum of the misused words 
uttered by his son and daughter dur- 
ing a recent breakfast. Here is the 
result: Elegant, 19 times; awful, 11 
times; dandy, six times; fierce, four 
times; great, two times. When the 
meal was over the head of the house- 
hold called the family around him in 
the library and gravely read the to- 
tals to them. 
“Gee, that’s fierce!” said the son. 
“Tsn’t it awful!” said the daughter. 
“Let’s see,” said ‘+> examining at- 
torney toa Lynn boarding house 
keeper, “there are front and back en- 
trances to your house, are there not?” 
“Ves, sir,” was the polite reply. “Now 
where is the back entrance located?” 
asked the lawyer. And you could not 
blame the lady for smiling when she 
replied: ’In the rear, of course.” 
Consistency may be a jewel, but it 
2 , 
has no value at the pawnbroker’s, 
