24 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
DO YOU WANT CLEAN COAL that can be aesendal 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, 
Manchester, or Magnolia? 
Then send your erders to 
Sprague, Breed & Brown Co. 
Tel. 280. 
Reverse the charge. 
Beverly, Mass. 
Poultr; and Game 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
The Best Quality 
Beverly Farms 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
-Reses, Herbaceous and Budding Plante 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
Work 
Decorations and Funeral 
Beverly Farms 
for 
Hale Street 
WENHAM 
Palm Sunday and Triumphat Entry 
will furnish the theme of the sermon 
at the village church Sunday morning, 
by the minister, Rev. F. M. Cutler. 
Sunday school at noon. The usual 
meeting of the Y.P.S.C.E.. will be 
omitted in order to permit those who 
desire, to attend the union C. E. meet- 
ing at 5.30 in the First Baptist church, 
Salem. The feature of the 7 p. m. 
service in Wenham, besides a special 
musical program, will be a stereopti- 
con address on China, the land studied 
this winter by the mission class. 
At 4 p. m. Wednesday thé Ladies’ 
society will hold their regular meeting 
and at 6 they will serve a public sup- 
per. Following the supper there will 
be a social entertainment. This day is 
the actual date of the Livingstone cen- 
tennial. But Livingstone anniversary 
exercises will be deferred until the 
following Sunday. 
Church night, will be observed 
Thursday at 7.30 with a meeting for 
mission study, and by general exer- 
cises commemorative of Holy week. 
“Markets and Festival Days in Eu- 
rope” will be the topic of a stereopti- 
con lecture in South Hamilton by Miss 
Margaret C. Bolles, the traveler, Tues- 
day, at 8 p.m, 
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 
Mrs. C. F. Elliott and Mrs. R. 
Davis recently made generous gifts of 
magazines to the Wenham Y.M.C.A. 
Charles T. Quinby and F. M. Cut- 
ler have been apointed collectors by 
the Progressive party of Massachu- 
setts. The. party is now raising its 
1913 campaign fund and asks each 
town to pay at the rate of 50c per vote. 
Wenham cast 51 Progressive votes 
last fall. 
The Wenham Village Improvement 
society announces a course of les- 
sons in practical cooking, to be given 
in the tea house, by Miss Ewart of 
Boston, on ‘Tuesday afternoons in 
April. The committee in charge are 
Mrs. E. R. Anderson, Mrs. E. B. Cole, 
Mrs. B. H. Tracy, Mrs. Arthur Prince, 
Miss Gertrude S. Metcalf, Miss Car- 
rie Merrill. The course is open to all 
members of the society. 
The average man is so suspicious 
that he imagines you are trying to 
poison his dog every time you throw 
him a bone. 
After a woman has succeeded in 
making a man feel cheap she never 
regards him as a bargain. 
It takes an expert to impress us 
with how little we know. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
On April 4th, the Girls’ club of the 
Baptist church will hold a special 
meeting and at that time listen to an 
address on “The Art of Right Liv- 
ing” by Miss Stern of Boston: 
Miss Jane M. Watson’s adult class 
in dancing, which completed its sec- 
ond course of the season last Monday, 
will continue to meet for several 
weeks. . 
“THE GOVERNOR’s Lapy” Last WEEK 
Whatever David Belasco sets out to 
do — he does — and whenever his 
name, either individually or in asso- 
ciation with some one else, is affixed 
to a play, an organization or a pro- 
duction, it is an absolute assurance of 
the merit and excellence of the of- 
fering presented; thus the playgoers 
become en rapport with the master 
producer and as a result his offering 
is accepted as the best that brain, 
energy or capital can supply. 
William Elliott and David Belasco’s 
marvellous presentation of “The Gov- 
ernor’s Lady” now at the Hollis 
Street Theatre on its final week, as 
previously made engagements  else- 
where necessitates its removal to 
“Green Fields and Pastures new’ — 
is an example of what a producer 
can do with a play that has the ele- 
ments of a dramatic possibility in ad- 
dition to its literary value. 
“The Governor’s Lady” has been 
the dramatic sensation of the season, 
disclosing the superior bravery of wo- 
manhood at the crucial moment: of 
great trial and privation, as well as 
illustrating the extent of self-sacri- 
fice a woman will endure fighting for 
what she contends is right. 
Kipling’s famous line ‘““The female 
of the species is more deadly than the 
male” has found a stage improvement 
in this play, for it reversed the theory 
of Kipling and reveals a story of to- 
day founded on what might be logi- 
cal incidents in the life of any one; 
and therein lies the big success of this 
truly wonderful play. 
When people come three and_ four 
times to witness the same perform- 
ance then the true mission of the stage 
has been fulfilled, as it surely appeals 
to that indefinable something in every 
human breast that seeks for more, 
and sends the auditor home with bet- 
ter resolutions made for the day to 
come. 
Boston will be the only city in New 
England visited by “The Governor’s 
Lady” this season. There will be 
matinees on Wednesday and Satur- 
day with the engagement ending on 
Saturday night, the 22nd, 
