20 
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 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
The Best Quality 
Beverly Farms 
BREWER’S 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
(Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be 
Morning 
MARKET 
Collected Every 
and Promptly Filled. 
Mass. 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
Roses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
for Decoartions and Funeral Work. 
Hale Street Beverly Farms 
WENHAM 
Rev. F. M. Cutler, minister of the 
village church, will preach Sunday 
morning on Jacob, the topic being sug- 
gested by the current Sunday school 
lessons. Sunday school at noon, Y. 
P. S.C. E. meeting at 6. The depart- 
ment of social service will have 
charge of the forum at 7, and will 
present as speaker Mr. Frank Good- 
hue of Salem, Superintendent of the 
State Department of the Adult Poor. 
Mr. Goodhue will explain how the tax 
payers’ money is expended for poor 
relief. 
Wenham misses its popular dealer, 
Charles B. Carey, and hopes that he 
will soon be well again. 
Raymond Trott and Mildred Per- 
kins operated the stereopticon for a 
lecture at South Hamilton Tuesday 
evening. 
Arrangements were made for plac- 
ing a base-ball team in the field, at 
the Y.M.C.A. meeting last Friday. 
Horace Durgin is to be the manager. 
Plans were also made for the sum- 
mer catnp in July. 
The annual meeting of the Wenham 
parish took place Tuesday at 7 p. m. 
The meeting, supper and roll-call of 
the church followed on Thursday 
evening. 
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. 
seach Street Hale Street 
Manchester Beverly Farms 
John Cannon, Carl Carey, Samuel 
Conary and Roger Knowlton took the 
international examination in first aid 
this week, under the auspices of the 
Y.M.C.A. and the American Red 
Cross. 
Miss Ewart’s cooking class, under 
the management of the Village Im- 
provement society, started Tuesday 
with a membership of over forty-five. 
The ladies learned to cook chicken 
and other comestibles, and proved the 
excellence of their own and Miss 
Ewart’s work by eating the products 
thereof, then and there. 
In addition to local singers of merit, 
Mrs. Daniel A. Gorman of Peabody 
rendered a beautiful solo selection at 
the church service Sunday evening. 
Breeze subscription, $2 a year. 
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 
The Pastor’s Hour class of the 
Baptist church has purchased a 
Bausch and Lamb stereopticon outfit 
at a cost of $51.00. 
The members of O. W. Holmes 
Council, K. of C., are pleased with 
their new quarters in Marshall’s 
block. New furniture has been added 
this week. 
Mrs. William R. Day is reported 
to be improving at the Beverly hospi- 
tal and is expected to be able to come 
home in a week. 
Next Wednesday evening at 7.30 
there will be a public illustrated lec- 
ture at the Baptist church on “Burma” 
by Rev. C. S. Pond, under the au- 
spices of the boys’ class. A silver col- 
lection will be taken and the funds 
thus received will be used to pay the 
balance due on the new lantern out- 
fit. 
The boys of the Pastor’s Hour 
class succeeded in raising $16.00 for 
the flood sufferers, at the entertain- 
ment last Friday evening. 
CHARLEY Case at B. F. Kerrx’s 
THEATRE 
Charley Case, known the country 
over as “The man who talks about his 
father,” returns to B. F. Keith’s Thea- 
tre next week after an absence of 
nearly two years. Case has just com- 
pleted a triumphant tour across the 
continent, which took him as far west 
as San Francisco and as far north 
as Vancouver, B. C. This is his first 
appearance in the East in two years. 
There are few vaudeville patrons who 
have not laughed at Case and his fun- 
ny stories about his father. The won- 
derful Thomas A. Edison Kineto- 
phone or Talking Motion Pictures will 
enter upon their seventh week of un- 
interrupted success with brand-new 
subjects. Another big feature will be 
Gertrude Vanderbilt, late feature of 
“The Red Widow,” and George 
Moore, will appear in a series of up- 
to-date songs and dances, and Galla- 
gher and Fields, America’s greatest 
travesty artists, in a brand-new farce 
comedy. Week of April 14th, 
“Peter,” the wonderful Chimpanzee. 
It’s Deap EAsy 
“Tt’s hard to lose the savings of a 
lifetime.” 
“Oh, not so‘hard. I know of a doz- 
en men with schemes that you could 
go into.” — Exchange. 
Servant (to his master, an author) 
—Sir, there are fifteen thousand peo- 
ple in the street who are clamoring to 
know what is going to happen in your 
serial tomorrow. —Pele Mele. 
