22 
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, 
Then send your erders to 
Manchester, or Magnolia? 
Essex, 
Sprague, Breed & Brown Co. 
Tel. 280. 
Reverse the charge. 
Beverly, Mass. 
Poultry and Game 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
The Best Quality 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
W@eats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
Beverly Farms 
Mass. 
3 PS 
A. CULBERT 
Importer and Manufacturer of 
FINE HARNESS, RIDING SADDLES AND HORSE FURNISHINGS 
A full line of Stable Supplies, Trunks, 
Repairing in all its branches. 
CENTRAL Nes 
Bags and Leather Novelties. 
Driving and Auto Gloves. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
BRANCH, BEACH STREET, MANCHESTER) 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
Roses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
for Decorations and Funeral Work. 
Street Beverly Farms 
Hale 
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 Hale Street 
Manchester ‘Beverly Farms 
Real Estate and Improvements 
Mary Parker of Boston conveys 
to Mary E. wife of Herbert V. Hunt 
of Peabody, land and buildings off 
Ocean avenue, Marblehead Neck, 
76 by 107 feet; also one-half inter- 
est in land, rocks, beach and shore 
with right of way from Ocean ave- 
nue, Marblehead Neck. 
Isaac M. Woodbury of Topsfield 
conveys to Thomas E. Proctor of 
Boston and Topsfield, 10 acres 
meadow. land in Wenham; also 8 
aeres woodland, Fowles island, 
Hamilton and Wenham. 
The new bungalow being built on 
Walnut street, South Hamilton, by 
Charles D. Sias of Boston and Wen- 
ham, is nearly completed and makes 
a fine addition to the pretty houses 
on that street. 
Georgie Lee, wife of James Lee 
of Boston et al, convey to Women’s 
Club House Association of Magno- 
lia and they to Frank 8. White of 
Boston, land and buildings, Shore 
road, Magnolia, 58 by 102.5 feet. 
Frank S. White of Boston con- 
veys to George A. Upton, land and 
buildings, Magnolia. 
Francis Murdock, Newton, as 
trustee, conveys to Costello C. Con- 
verse of Boston, land and buildings, 
Fuller street, to Shore road, Magno- 
ha, 50 by 292 feet, also land Fuller 
avenue, to Shore road, Gloucester, 
25 by 125 feet. 
Edwin Chase, Newton, et als., 
convey to Costello C. Converse, land 
and buildings, Fuller street, to 
Shore road, Magnolia, 50 by 292 
feet. 
Henry Souther et al., trustees, 
convey to Irene P. Currier of New 
York, land Page street and way, 
Bass Rocks, Gloucester, 100 by 207.3 
feet. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
There will be an evening concert 
given by the choir of the Baptist 
church, Sunday evening at 7 o’clock 
and a large attendance is assured. 
For a month the organist and direc- 
tor have been preparing the pro- 
gram. The choir will sing, ‘‘He 
shall feed His Flocks.’’ Miss Flor- 
ence Chapman, soloist, will sing, 
‘‘Ashamed of ' Jesus.’’ A quartet 
will sing ‘‘In Heavenly Love Abid- 
ing’’; the anthem, ‘‘The Lord is 
my Shepherd;’’ will be sung by the 
choir. There will be a duet, ‘‘I 
heard the’ Voice of Jesus Say.”’ 
There will be an instrumental selee- 
tion by the Bible School orchestra. 
We must call attention of a Bev- 
erly Farms reader of the Breeze to 
the rule about signing name_ to 
items sent in for publication. We 
do not wish to publish the name; 
we want to know simply who sends 
the item. ; 
Fred W. Varney, Willard B. Pub- 
licover and Robert Smith were 
among those from the Farms who 
enjoyed the banquet of the Get To- 
gether club of St. Peter’s chureh in 
Beverly Tuesday evening. The pro- 
gram was one of much interest — 
speeches and music were features. 
The Ladies’ Auxiliary of St. 
John’s Episcopal chureh met yester- 
day afternoon with Mrs. Joseph 
Holroyd at her home, Pride’s Cross- 
Poaing:- 
Michael O’Hearn, brother of Pat- 
rick O’Hearn of this town, and well 
known to the older Farms people, 
passed away at his Brookline home 
recently. 
On January 27th, Wm. R. Brooks 
had a load of dressing dumped in a 
pile on his asparagus ‘bed. One day 
this week he had the pile spread 
and found a nice supply of aspara- 
gus sprouted and grown in the cir- 
cular spot which had been covered. 
It had grown in about three weeks’ 
time during a period of the most 
severe weather. 
The MIT team in the, YMCA 
Tigh school students’ basket ball 
league by winning their sixth 
straight game last Tuesday  after- 
noon, won the championship of the 
league. Henry Wright, Howard 
Morgan and Wilbur Hardy are 
three Farms boys on the team. The 
second team in the league standing 
is the Amherst, captained by Joseph 
Donovan. 
Stephen J. Connolly was a guest 
of the Manchester club last Monday 
evening and gave them a most inter- 
esting and instructive address on 
the Panama eanal, which-he visited 
last month. 
