BEVERLY FARMS 
This has been vacation week for 
the Beverly schools. 
Miss Mollie Davis has a position 
with the North Shore Breeze, Man- 
chester. 
Miss Alice L. Bolton of Stamford, 
Conn., has been visiting friends in 
Beverly Farms for the past week. 
John West colony, Pilgrim Fath- 
ers, will hold their semi-monthly 
meeting in Marshall’s hall this 
evening. 
It is now manager ‘‘Dutchey’’ 
Holland of the Beverly Farms Base- 
ball club. He has already got busy 
and will soon have lines on some 
fast players. 
Howard E. Morgan, Jr., has re- 
ceived his letters ‘‘B. T. T. eet ere 
reward for his work recently done 
on the track team of the Beverly 
High school. 
Dunean T. Smith and family this 
week moved into the Otis N. Davis 
cottage on Everett st. They have 
lived the past number of years in 
the Chas. H. Day house, in Depot 
square. 
The last meeting of the season 
for the Ladies Auxiliary of the St. 
John’s Episcopal church was held 
yesterday afternoon at the home of 
Mrs. Ernest Townsend, West Man- 
chester. 
Benjamin Manning and family of 
Malden have moved to Beverly 
Farms, occupying one of the Mat- 
thew Smith cottages on Hart st. 
Mr. Manning is employed at Con- 
nolly’s garage on Oak st. 
Arthur L. Standley, John A. Camp- 
bell, George D. Batchelder, and Geo. 
S. Williams, Spanish War veterans, 
attended the annual re-union of Co. 
E 8th Mass. U.S. V. association held 
in Salem, Tuesday evening. Geo. 
S. Williams was elected the secre- 
tary for the coming year. 
The good work being done by 
Joseph Rourke and John Toomey, 
two Beverly Farms players on the 
Beverly High school ball team, is 
deserving of much praise and prob- 
ably these two speedy players will 
find a regular place on the Bever- 
ly Farms team, after the school sea- 
son is over. 
The annual meeting of the mem- 
bers of the Beverly Farms Fire de- 
partment will be held at the West 
St. Engine house next Monday even- 
ing when officers for the ensuing 
year will be elected. Today, mem- 
bers have been receiving their 
checks from the city treasurer, most- 
ly for $100 each, being the payment 
due for services as firemen during 
the past year. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
21 
THE THISSELL COMPANY 
High Grade Food Products 
Post Office Building - 
Twe Phones, 150 and 151 
A meeting of the eligible Sons of 
Veterans was held in G. A. R. hall 
Tuesday evening and it was voted 
to form a camp at Beverly Farms to 
be called the Andrew Standley camp. 
Elmer Standley was elected com- 
mander; George F. Wood, senior 
vice com., and HK. Fred Day, junior 
vice com. The Camp Council are 
J. Millet Younger, Clarence Preston 
and Ralph Holmes. The applica- 
tion for a charter bearing twenty- 
five names has been forwarded to 
the S. of V. Div. headquarters. 
Fred Williams, a popular Beverly 
Farms young man, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Alfred Williams of Haskell st., 
was united in marriage last 
Friday evening to Miss Frances 
Pembroke, daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. A. H. Pembroke of Wen- 
ham. The ceremony was performed 
at Portsmouth, N: H., by Rev. Fr. 
Walsh of the Catholic church of 
that city. The marriage came as a 
surprise to their many friends as 
both are well known throughout the 
city. The bride, for the past two 
years, has been employed in the 
Beverly office of Sprague, Breed & 
Brown Co., and Mr. Williams is a 
plumber by occupation and _ has 
been employed by Jos. C. Stanwood. 
They are to reside on Essex st., Bev- 
erly. 
Empire Theatre Salem. 
J. Hartly Manners’ fine drama, 
‘“‘Zira,’’? in which Margaret Anglin 
starred with great success, will be 
the farewell offering of the popular 
Empire Stock Co. at the Empire 
Theatre, Salem, all next week. Hes- 
ter Trent, the heroine of this play, 
is introduced to the audience as an 
outeast on the South African battle- 
field, her crime having been an il- 
licit love affair with a married Brit- 
ish officer when she was only 16 
years of age, a child deserted by a 
eruel father. 
At the moments when Hester be- 
lieves that there is no future for 
her, there comes into camp a young 
girl, an orphan, who is enroute to 
England to see her parents’ people 
for the first time. The camp is at- 
tacked, and the girl is wounded, 
fatally so the surgeon says. Hester 
seizes the opportunity, takes the 
girl’s papers, and goes to England, 
where the succeeding scenes of the 
drama take place. 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
If one is busy call the other. 
WARDS DAIRY LUNCH 
PETER WARD, Prop. 
24 West St., Beverly Farms 
Quick Lunch at all Hours, 5.30 a. m. to 11 p. m. 
$3.50 Meal Tickets for $3.25 
M. T. MURPHY 
Fine Harness and Saddlery 
Sponges, Chamois, Oils, Dressings, Soaps, and 
all kinds of Supplies for the Horse, Stable and 
Automobile. Repairing of Hainess, Trunks, 
Bags and all Leather Goods a Specialty. 
BEVERLY FARMS Opp. B. & M. Depot 
W. H. McCORMACK 
AUTOMOBILE 
and Carriage 
Painting and 
Trimming. .» 
326 Rantoul Street 
Tel. Gon. 
Beverly, Mass. 
BERtLITZ BOOKS 
FRENGH with or without Master 
vols, $1 per vol. 
GERMAN with or without Master 
2 vols. ~ $1.25 per vol. 
SPANISH with or without Master 
vols. $1 per vol. 
SHATTERING OF SPANISH 30 CENTS 
Genoa Illustrated, $1 per vol. 
THE BERLITZ METHOD 
FRENCH, GERMAN, 2 vols. $1. per vol. 
SPANISH, ITALIAN, RUSSIAN, SWEDISH, HUNGARIAN, 
BOHEMIAY, PORTUGUESE, DUTCH, DANISH, ETC., ETC., 
each vol. complete, $1.50 per vol. 
Business English, LeFrancais Com- 
mercial, (Deutsche Handelssprache, 
El Papal Commercial, 75c each. 
Edition Berlitz, Collection of 
Interesting Comedies Novelettes, 
etc., (French) @omedies: 25c; 
Nowelettcs AS: Complete @htac 
logue and Price List sent on appli- 
cation. 
D. BERLITZ 
NEw ge Pee eee EN YORE: 
THE BERLITZ METHOD FOR CHILDREN 
a In French, German and English 
1122 Broapway, 
