NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
On ‘Tuesday, papers were passed 
whereby Henry D. Stillman transfers 
to Henry P. McKean, Jr., the Dodge 
farms (so-called), at East Wenham. 
The estate is one of the most desir- 
able in that section and adds another 
to those recently purchased in that vi- 
cinity by the summer residents for 
homes. It consists of a fine farm 
house, a large barn and other build- 
ings with more than 50 acres of land, 
mostly tillage. For neighbors the new 
Oris SKINNER IN “KISMET.” 
Edward  Knoblauch’s Oriental 
drama, ‘Kismet,’ with Otis Skinner 
in the role of Hajj the Beggar, and 
presented by Klaw & Erlanger and 
Harrison Grey Fiske, is now the at- 
traction at the Hollis Street Theatre, 
Boston. Owing to the length of the 
play and the magnitude of the pro- 
duction the curtain will rise at 7.45 
o’clock in the evenings and at 1.45 
o'clock in the afternoons. 
The drama, described as “An 
Arabian Night,” is not, however, a 
dramatization of any one of Schecher- 
ezade’s remarkable stories. Rather it 
is a paraphrase of them all. The plot, 
the incidents, and the characters, are 
original with Mr. Knoblauch, yet, so 
thoroughly .did he saturate himself 
with the wondrous tales that their 
flavor permeates the play from begin- 
ning to end. The intrigue; the hu- 
mor; the lightning-quick changes of 
fortune; the splendors and _barbari- 
ties; the pomp and _ pageantry; the 
craft, cunning and wit of Oriental 
life as revealed in “The Arabian 
Real Estate and Improvements 
..- Up and Down the North Shore... 
owner will have the F. H. Princes, 
Wm. Gordon Means and Quincy A. 
Shaw, 2nd. 
KX 
It is reported that the Building 
Trades council, representative of all 
the unions engaged in the building 
trades, has voted to put the White job, 
so-called, at Manchester, on the fair 
list. The announcement will be made 
shortly. 
Nights” are all present in “Kismet,” 
and are woven together in a gorgeous 
dramatic tapestry. 
In the maelstrom of incidents that 
make up the plot of the play, the cen- 
tral figure is Hajj the Beggar, a rascal 
of much wit and resource who passes 
his life asking alms at the door of the 
Carpenters in the ancient city of 
Baghdad. In his impersonation of the 
character Mr. Skinner has attained 
the highest point in his splendid pro- 
gress — a progression that has been 
marked by many successes. 
Macityn ARBUCKLE IN “THE RounpD 
Up” at THE Boston THEATRE 
Maclyn Arbuckle in Klaw and Er- 
langer’s noted production of the most 
thrilling and massively mounted of 
dramas, “The Round-Up,” has created 
a memorable sensation at the Boston 
Theatre. From the rush of orders 
for seats it will doubtlessly dupli- 
cate its former popular triumph. 
As those who have gone for fresh 
scenes and adventures to a life in the 
far West, have been fascinated by the 
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, 
S84 LEM, MASS. 
outdoor life of perpetual and hazard- 
ous excitement amid wild surround- 
ings, so all Boston was held almost 
spellbound with a strange fascination 
at the thrilling scenes of Western life 
brought to their door, so to speak, in 
the graphic pictures presented in 
“The Round-Up.” It is the vivid re- 
production of scenes in which Indians, 
cowboys, ranchmen, cavalrymen, ven- 
turesome Western men and women 
and dozens of bronchos are concerned, 
which so many have read about but 
which so few have actually seen, that 
have made “The Round-Up” so ab- 
sorbingly interesting and an object of 
wonderment in the marvellous presen- 
tation of the desert plains and can- 
yons and almost terrifying realism of 
its famous battle scene. 
The dramatic incident of twenty 
mounted Indians riding along on a 
cliff in the third act and the marvel- 
lously realistic battle scene add an ele- 
ment of realism to the play which has 
rarely been equalled in the history of 
the American stage. 
Regular matinees Wednesday and 
Saturday. Special prices will prevail 
during “The Round-Up” engagement, 
-—25c, 50c, 75c and $1.00. No seat 
over $1.00. 
BEHIND TIME 
“What is the matter with this rail- 
way?” asked one irate passenger. 
“This train is three or four hours 
overdue.” 
“Think of me,” said the stockhold- 
er, “and have patience. Its dividends 
are three or four years overdue.” 
There’s a good streak in every man, 
but in many of them the assay is so 
low that it doesn’t pay for the cost of 
mining. 
A colored philosopher is reported 
to have said, “Life, my breddren, am 
mos’ly made up of prayin’ for rain, 
and then wishin’ it would cl’ar off.” 
—Presbyterian. 
NaturaLty So 
“All the parts in this play are fat 
parts.” 
“They have to be when the play it- 
self is laid in Greece.” 
Love is the greatest thing in the 
world, provided the girl is pretty and 
the old man has money. 
It May SERVE 
Willie—What’s an artistic ending, 
dad? 
Crabshaw—When the author gets 
stuck, and can’t finish the story.— 
Puck. 
ARRARERRC IY Ret RRE TT LE rem me me ne 
