20 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
DO YOU WANT CLEAN COAL that can be depended upon 
Do YOU 
to always run uniform? 
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 
Best 
The Quality 
Beverly Farms 
BREWER’S 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
M@eats and [Provisions 
Orders will be 
Morning 
MARKE1 
Collected Every 
and Promptly Filled. 
Mass. 
JAMES B. DOW 
; J. B. Dow John H. Cheever 
JAS. B. DOW & CO 
Gardener and Florist | Coal and Wood 
Roses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
for Decoartions and Funeral Work. 
Hale Street Beverly Farms 
WENHAM 
Rev. Joseph L. Hoyle of Hamilton 
will preach at Wenham Sunday morn- 
ing in exchange with Rev. F. M. Cut- 
ler, minister of the Village church. 
Mr. Hoyle, who is not only a strong 
preacher but also a singer of reputa- 
tion, will render an appropriate solo 
before the sermon. Sunday school at 
noon. YiP.S. CEs meéttirig at. 
Evening meeting with sermon by Mr. 
Cutler at 7. 
Once a year the Wenham _ Girls’ 
club gives a demonstration of its 
work. This event, for 1913, will oc- 
cur Friday at 8 p. m. There will be 
an exhibition of folk dancing and 
other gymnastic activities. 
Invitations are out for the wedding 
reception of Martha Evelyn Perkins 
and George EF. W. Woodason, to be 
held at the residence of the bride’s 
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wesley 
Perkins, Wednesday evening, April 
30. 
Camping is to be cruising this year 
for the Wenham boy scouts and other 
members of the Y.M.C.A. At their 
meeting last week the lads veted to 
go on the boy scout ship, Pioneer, for 
the week of June 30 to July 7. As 
an immediate preparation many of 
them indulged in rowing practice at 
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 
Idlewood Lake last Saturday under 
the instruction of scoutmaster Cutler. 
- The concluding event w1s a boat race, 
closely contested, between a crew of 
Lions and another of Snakes, in 
which the former were victors by a 
narrow margin. 
yet quite all the funds they need for 
this outing. A ball game between the 
Wenham Y.M.C.A. and the Beverly 
boy scouts was scheduled for last Sat- 
urday, but was postponed by reason 
of wet grounds. Saturday, April 26, 
is arbor day — an important event in 
the scout calendar — when the boys 
will assemble and plant trees. 
Ethel—Dear me, how did Dick 
ever come to get engaged to that fat 
widow? 
Reggie—Don’t ask me. I know no 
more about it than Dick does. — Chi- 
cago News. 
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. 
The boys have not. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
The Ladies’ Sewing circle of the 
Baptist church met last evening with 
M. Elizabeth Hull, Hart street. 
Edward ‘Toomey, who has been the 
assistant at the Pride’s Crossing de- 
pot, has resigned that position and 
Wednesday commenced duties as 
spare brakeman on the B. & M. R.R. 
Wm. Craig is Mr. Toomey’s successor 
at the station. 
The early part of the week Wilbur 
Hardy took a government examina- 
tion at the Charlestown Navy yard on 
wireless telegraphy, resulting in_ his 
receiving the necesary license. ile 
has a wireless apparatus and has be- 
come an expert operator. 
A fox terrier belonging to Will 
Marshall was killed by an auto 1 ues- 
day. 
Rehearsals begin tonight for the 
“Old Folks Concert” which is to be 
given in the near future under the au- 
spices of the music committee and 
choir of the Farms’ Baptist church. 
Mrs. John H. Linehan has been 
chosen chairman of the Ward 6 Chil- 
dren’s home garden contest committee. 
Harry Hannable and family are to 
spend the holiday and week-end vis- 
iting relatives at Kittery, Me. Their 
daughter Miss Louise Hannable, has 
been on a_ visit there the past five 
weeks. 
“KISMET” AT THE HoLLis 
Klaw & Erlanger and Harrison G. 
Fiske’s superb’ production of Ed- 
ward Knoblauch’s “Arabian Nights” 
drama, “Kismet” with Otis Skinner 
in the stellar role, is now in the fifth 
week of its very successful run at the 
Hollis Street Theatre, Boston. The 
play and the production have won the 
same high favor here as in New York, 
Chicago and other American cities. 
The drama itself, which is Mr, Kno- 
blauch’s master-piece, has been pre- 
sented during the past two years in 
nearly every country in which the 
legitimate theatre is established, and 
it is recognized as one of the finest 
pieces of dramatic literature that has 
come from the pen of a contemporary 
playwright. 
The large company — surrounding 
Mr. Skinner is quite worthy of the star 
and the performances are notable for 
the exquisite artistic balance main- 
tained, and for the attention paid to 
minute detail. Among the prominent 
players in the organization of nearly 
one hundred are Fred Eric, George 
Gaul, Owen Meech, Daniel Jarrett, 
Charles Darrah, Harrison Carter, Rita 
Jolivet. Eleanor Gordon, Georgia 
Woodthorpe, Ivy Payne and Merle 
Maddern. 
OO 
