NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 31 
—_—— 
W. J. CREED 
CATERER 
And Private Waiting 
EAST CORNING STREET 
BEVERLY COVE, MASS. 
Telephone 765 Beverly 
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7 MRS. MATILDA HANKS 
7, COMPETENT COOK 
Y For luncheons and dinner parties or will 
Y accommodate by day or week. Good ref- 
4 erences. 
Y 95 Summer St., near Lincoln Street 
Y 
“/_ 
SS 
“a 
J. Sterman 
22 Summer Street, Manchester 
New and Second-hand Furniture sold at 
reasonable prices. Also dealer in Junk, Metal 
Rubber, etc. Trade at home and get big discount 
pe 
Orpen New BEVERLY LIBRARY 
Invitations have been sent out for the 
opening exercises of the public library 
at Beverly this afternoon. ‘The build- 
ing 1s situated on Essex street and is 
an imposing looking structure. After 
the inspection of the building by the 
invited guests at 4.30 this afternoon 
an informal reception will be held at 
eight this evening to which everyone 
is cordially invited. 
RAAnnes 
ISSN 6. > ".3>\\ luL_L|;“,)] "'" 
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Wy 
LIFE INSURANCE 
SS 
NS 
BEVENIUALLY— 
You must buy your Life 
Insurance in an Old 
Line Company. 
WHY NOT NOW IN 
the ‘Trouble Proof Co. 
the old 
JOHN HANCOCK. CO., 
Mass. 
ote, Boston, 
Drop a postal for me to 
call and talk it over with 
you. Address :— 
Gh. ao eo LROPLE, 
District Agent. 
Either Manchester, Glou- 
cester or Rekport. 
>00@™—WWW 0 ' =; W000, 0 gy GSN 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Miss Marian Greeley is at the 
Brownlands, Manchester, with her 
mother, who came earlier in the sea- 
son. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Kidder of 
Boston, who have been motoring 
through the White Mountains, have 
arrived at the Brownlands, and are 
occupying the Gannet cottage, in 
which they resided last summer. The 
Misses Fabyan also arrived yesterday 
at the Brownlands for the season. 
While I was in New Hampshire re- 
cently I visited at Moultonboro the 
scene of Thomas G. Plant’s real estate 
enterprise. He has purchased several 
thousand acres of land on a mountain, 
where he is building what will be a 
magnificent mansion to cost at least 
$500,000, while the preliminary work 
will amount to as much more. ‘There 
are now 300 horses and 100 wagons 
employed, with about 800 laborers, all 
working on the roads and in leveling 
off the top of the mountain for the 
house. A stable large enough to house 
about 300 horses is also under con- 
struction. Although the work now 
under way is sufficient to cause aston- 
ishment, it is nothing compared to the 
surprise of seeing another ‘feature. 
The land Mr. Plant bought included 
what had been a park on which is a 
hotel and perhaps a dozen other build- 
ings. All the yellow structures are 
now daubed in a hideous manner with 
black paint in straights and curved 
lines, as well as crude attempts to 
make pictures—a conspicuous object 
is a large eye on the side of a barn. 
Every little building has its disfigur- 
ing black paint. One man named 
Horn, 83 years of age, whose farm 
house is directly opposite the disfigured 
buildings, would not sell at the price 
offered. His home is now faced by 
a fence 300 feet long and 30 feet 
high. And what a fence! It is con- 
structed of 30 Stout posts, well braced, 
- and nailed to them in a varied asscrt- 
ment of ill-shaped, ragged boards, 
limbs of trees, parts of. an old rvof 
They are fastened in all sorts of queer 
positions and battered to look as badly 
as possible. Old Mr. Horn, atmost 
blind from cataracts, says it is pretty 
hard for his womenfolks to be obliged 
to look at the disreputable fence He 
doesn’t mind, for he cannot see across 
the road. Before Mr. Plant entered 
upon the scene there were six or eight 
families living on the hill farms, but 
now Mr. Horn is the only permanent 
resident, and he says it is lonesome. 
—Man About Town, Salem News. 
Everybody reads the Breeze. 
Telephone 84W 
KIRCHNER 
Formerly with Redfern of Paris 
41 West 45th Street 
New York 
Donchit Bldg. 
MAGNOLIA 
In store with Rees & Rees 
IMPORTER 
Ladies’ Tailoring 
and Gowns 
Mme. Kirchner desires to inform 
her patrons that she has opened a 
North Shore Branch, where she is 
prepared to make Ladies’ Gowns 
also Riding Habits, Lin- 
Mellen elGs Cle: 
to order; 
Appointments may be made by 
mail or ’phone. Will go to pa- 
tron’s home. 
Z 
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Everybody..reads the Breeze. 
) 
ECONOMY IS 
WEALTH 
Which means that the best 
is the cheapest. This ap- 
plies to printed matter as 
well as other lines. 
Let us do your next order 
of printing. We can save 
you money. 
BREEZE PRINT 
