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? 
Is your home in Beverly, Beverly Farms, Wenham, Hamilton, Essex, 
Manchester, or Magnolia? 
Sprague, 
Tel. 280. Reverse the charge. 
Then send your orders to 
Breed & Brown Co. 
Beverly, Mass. 
Poultry and Game 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
(Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
The Best Quality 
Beverly Farms 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
Maas. 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
Reses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
and Funeral Work. 
Beverly Farms 
for Decorations 
Hale Street 
J. B. Dow 
John H. 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 
Manchester 
Hale Street 
Beverly Farms 
WENHAM 
Rev. F. M. Cutler, minister of the 
village church, will preach on The 
Lord’s Prayer Sunday morning. 
Sunday school at noon. Y.P.S.C.E. 
meeting at 6. The 7 p. m. meeting 
will be a musical service, using the 
hymn “Jesus Lover of My Soul.” 
Tuesday at 7 p. m., is the time of 
the annual parish meeting. Reports 
will be read, and officers elected for 
the ensuing year. 
Thursday at 6, the annual supper, 
roll-call and business meeting of the 
church will be held. Chairmen of the 
six church departments will tell of 
their work, and other officers will re- 
port. The church invites all who are 
members of churches elsewhere and 
who customarily worship here, to- 
gether with their husbands or wives, 
to attend and enjoy this meeting. 
The Breeze $2.00 per year post- 
paid to any part of the country. 
A Come-Back 
Man (sitting) — Pardon me, mad- 
am, but you’re standing on my feet. 
Woman (standing) — If you were 
anything of a man you’d be standing 
on them yourself. — Boston Tran- 
Script. 
GREAT REAL EstTaTE AND HoME 
IssuE 
On Saturday, April 5, the Boston 
Evening Transcript will print a gen- 
erous amount of reading matter which 
will be of interest to real estate own- 
ers in New England, investors and 
those who lease or have summer 
homes at the seashore, mountains or 
country. 
Anyone having a house, farm, cot- 
tage or desirably located land for sale 
or exchange, or a summer place to 
rent for the season will do well to se- 
cure advertising space in this issue, 
for it will have a wide circulation 
among interested people all over the 
United States. 
Faith will move mountains, but it 
takes industry to pay a debt. 
CLASSIFIED ADS. 
It is not too early to begin looking 
for summer business. Many peo- 
ple look to the Breeze every 
spring for suggestions as to where 
they can obtain Rooms for the 
summer. If you have a room to 
let it is not too early to begin 
advertising it NOW. It costs 2c 
a word the first week and Ic a 
week thereafter. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
A daughter was born recently to 
Mr. and Mrs. D. Joseph Linehan of 
Beverly Farms, who are spending the 
winter in Boston. 
E. T. & G. P. Connolly, 2nd, who 
recently purchased a large auto truck 
are now prepared to do general truck- 
ing business. 
C. A. McKenzie, well known to 
the building trade mechanics at the 
Farms, who has been the supt. for a 
long time with L. D. Willcutt & Sons 
Co., of Boston, has associated himself 
with C. C. Temple under the firm 
name of MacKenzie and Temple, 
contractors and builders, with an of- 
fice in Boston. Mr. MacKenzie is at 
present in charge of work on the 
house of Allan Curtis at Beverly 
Farms. 
The motion pictures to be given at 
the Baptist church chapel this evening 
at 7.30 o’clock, under the auspices of 
the Pastor’s Hour class will be a pop- 
ular public entertainment. The pict- 
ures are by he Edison Home Kine- 
toscope and will be something new 
for Beverly Farms. A silver collect- 
ion will be taken. 
Henrietta Patch, wife of former 
councilman Chas. H. Patch, passed 
away at her home at Centreville Tues- 
day at the age of 77 years, 8 months. 
She and Mr. Patch would have cele- 
brated their 58th marriage anniver: 
sary the coming June. 
Mrs. George F. Keenan (Gertrude 
Connolly) and child of Brighton, 
spent the past weex at Beverly Farms 
visiting Mrs. Keenan’s parents, Mr. 
and Mrs. Thos. D. Connolly of Oak 
street. 
CouLDN’T ESCAPE 
He was one of those timid, tiny- 
toned chaps who become enamored by 
mistake, and live in perpetual fear of 
a pending engagement ring. He him- 
self had become enamored of a sweet 
and soulful maiden, whose languish- 
ing expression tore him between de- 
light and fear. 
At the conclusion of his first “call” 
she asked: 
“When 
dear ?” 
He seized the wrong hat from the 
rack in his confusion. 
“Er — what about some time next 
week?” he hazarded. 
A look of disappointment came in- 
to the fair one’s eyes. 
“Next week?” she said. “Yes, that 
will do lovely! Come round tomor- 
row night, dear, and we’ll decide defi- 
nitely upon the day.” —Answers 
are you coming again, 
