26 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Harry Saunders, who has many 
friends at Beverly Farms and 
Prides, through his former connec- 
tion with one of the large estates 
here, has recently opened a lunch 
room in the Daniels block and is 
preparing to take care of a good 
trade the present season in the line 
of supplying fresh and wholesome 
food and fancy dishes to his pa- 
trons. He also carries a line of 
smokers articles, and will have ice- 
eream for sale. Call around and see 
Harry. 
For sixteen years Maurice Silver- 
berg has been coming to the North 
Shore, to follow his long list of 
patrons from the Back Bay every 
season, and incidentally to take 
care of a constantly increasing num- 
ber of other customers. His store 
on West street, Beverly Farms, is 
now open for a long season and he 
will welcome a renewal of former 
patronage and will give the same 
prompt and careful attention as he 
has in the past sixteen seasons. 
<i e 
Telephone 124-3 Beverly Farms 
.Boston Telephone 3416-L Back Bay 
New York and Boston Tailoring 
Company 
M. Silverberg, Prop. 
FINE CUSTOM TAILORS 
Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing a specialty. 
Stable and Livery Suits. made to order. Careful 
attention to all -work. Goods called for and 
delivered. 16th season. | Prices reasonable. 
West Street Beverly Farms 
ASK ANY HORSE 
Eureka 
Harness 
Oil 
Axle 
3 Grease 
Sold by dealers everywhere 
Standard Oi) Co. of New York 
BEVERLY FARMS 
The Girl’s club of the Baptist 
church was entertained Tuesday 
evening by Mrs. Lewis G. Williams 
at her home on High street. 
Mr. White, president of the Spo- 
kane, Wash., Park commissioners 
made a visit along the North Shore 
this week. He was the guest of 
Connolly Bros., while here. 
Albert Dix is the chauffeur order 
clerk at the North Shore Fish Co’s 
market. 
Edward Townsend has resumed 
his lobster business for the season. 
Tle has a cottage which he makes 
his headquarters on Tinker’s Island, 
off Marblehead. 
Miss Harriet Matthews of La- 
econia, N. H., spent the past week 
visiting friends at the Farms. 
Frank A. Williams is at present 
located in the vicinity of New Bed- 
ford, in connection with his work on 
collecting statistics for the Labor 
Bureau Dept. 
Theodore Voornevelt and family 
moved from the MeKee mansion this 
week, which they kept open since 
last fall, to their own cottage on 
Greenwood avenue. 
Wednesday, May 29th, all the pu- 
pils of the Farms school will go to 
3everly to take part in the GAR | 
memorial exercises, which will be 
held on the Beverly common. This 
new plan takes the place of the pro- 
gram of past years when the exer- 
cises were held in the assembly hall 
of the Farms school. 
Vacations for the permanent men 
of the Fire Department have been 
planned. Driver, William 8S. Pike 
goes first, driver, John F. Mackey 
second and then John W. Morgan. 
The vacations are for ten day 
periods. 
Letters remaining unclaimed at 
the Beverly Farms post office for 
the week ending May 15:—Fred 
Ambrose, George M. 
John J. Buckley, John Dunn, Miss 
Marry Fairy, John Hannon, Mrs. KE. 
A. F. Lincoln, Charles E. Meade, B. 
F. Wade.—Willham R. Brooks, post- 
master. 
The Farms school ball team will 
play the Washington school tomor- 
row forenoon in Beverly on the 
patronage since he opened his 
Open Sundays. 
HARRY SAUNDERS 
Desires to thank the people of Beverly Farms for their very liberal 
LUNCH ROOM in DANIELS’ 
He begs to inform the public that he is prepared to serve lunches at 
all hours—6 a. m. to 11 p. m.—as well as regular meals. 
he carries a good line of Bakery Products. 
ice Gream for Sale. 
BLOCK 
Also that 
Cigars, Tobacco, etc. 
Browning, 
BEVERLY FARMS 
John D. Muteh arrives this even- 
ing from Washington, D. C., where 
he has spent the time since last fall. 
Mr. Mutch is in charge of Mrs. 
Leiter’s stables. 
The top mast to the liberty pole 
in Central square has not yet been 
raised from its position of winter 
storage. This should be attended to 
at once and the reason it has not 
been done is probably through an 
oversight. 
Ward 3 play grounds. 
Forrester H. Pierce, Jr., is enter- 
taining three of his fellow students 
of the Boston college over the week- 
end. 
Miss Grace Brainard of East 
Braintree has been among. this 
week’s visitors at the Farms. 
Mrs. Forrester H. Pierce, who is 
soon to move to Chester, Vt., to join 
her husband and family, offers her 
home on West street to rent. 
Robert E. Hodgkins of H. M. & 
R. E. Hodgkins received the follow- 
ing letter this week postmarked 
Lynn, with $4.00 enclosed :—Dear 
Sir: Enclosed please find $4.00 for 
payment of two brushes which I 
took from your shop at the time 
while I was working for you. Hop- 
ing this money will pay for the 
same and hoping that you will for- 
give and forget, I am. Signed, a 
Penitent. Mr. Hodgkins has no idea 
who the ‘‘Penitent’’ is. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hallett of 
New York moved to the Farms this 
week for the summer. Mr. Hallett 
is chauffeur for a Pride’s summer 
resident. 
‘‘Bill Skimmings buried his father 
in a most unhandsome way very 
near his barn,’’ said the man at the 
other end of the table. ‘‘The neigh- 
bors thought it was a shame, and 
made a good deal of talk about it. 
One of them thought he would pun- 
ish Bill by searing him and lay in 
wait for him near his father’s grave 
on a dark night. As Bill went by 
on his way from the barn the man 
rose up as if from the tomb and 
exclaimed in a ghostly voice: ‘Il am 
your father, Bill.’ ”’ 
‘* “Who said you warn’t!’ Bill 
answered. ‘Git down thar into yer 
hole where yer’ belong!’ and: he 
struck him across the face with a 
bridle he was carrying, such a rap 
that the would-be-alarmist carried 
the sear for months.”’ 
The Breeze in the best advertising 
medium on the North Shore. A trial 
will convinee, 
