20 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
‘. d hie 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Ww ’ 
Poultry and Game BRE ER = MARK Bek Howard P. Williams is taking a 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. few days vacation visiting friends 
Eggs and Butter r in New York City. 
Sccieae y hee Meats and Provisions Mrs. Roland Prescott of Rutland, 
ar oar: Orders: willttercolicnead savory Mass., has spent the past week here 
The Best Quality Morning and Promptly Filled. visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
Beverly Farms 
James B. Dow 
Mass. 
John H. Cheever 
JAMES B. DOW & CO. 
COAL AND WOOD 
We are now prepared to deliver coal at short notice to all parts of Man- 
chester and Beuerly Farms. 
Beach Street 
Manchester 
ANTI-SUFFRAGE NOTES. 
BY MRS, HENRY PRESTON WHITE 
The Brookline Study club will 
meet at the home of Mrs. William 
P. Shreve, 1755 Beacon st., Boston 
on Thursday moning, May 14, at 11 
o’clock. Mrs. A. J. George, field 
secretary of the Massachusetts Anti- 
Suffrage association, will speak. 
Mrs. George, who speaks most ably 
and entertainingly along other 
lines, will give three addresses on 
literary subjects, in May, for the 
Bridgeport (Conn.), Fresh Air as- 
sociation. The association owns a 
house in Fairfield Woods, in which 
convalescents from the Bellevue 
Hospital are cared for during the 
Lady Tennyson.”’ 
The Lexington branch of the 
Massachusetts Anti-Suffrage asso- 
ciation have recently formed a large 
Anti-Suffrage Current Events class, 
which is to meet weekly. At a meet- 
ing held on Wednesday morning, 
May 6, Mrs. Wm. Lowell Putnam, 
chairman of the education and or- 
ganization committee, was the 
speaker. 
summer. Last year Mrs. George’s 
talks on current events earned a 
garden for the association; this year 
the funds will be applied to the pur- 
chase of a horse and carriage. The 
subjects of the talks are ‘‘ Dorothy 
Wordsworth,’’ ‘‘Mary  Lamb,’’ 
‘‘Klizabeth Barrett Browning and 
UNFORTUNATE. 
“They say that Mrs. Waddington’s 
little boy is ambidextrous,” said Mrs. 
Oldcastle. 
“Land sakes exclaimed Mrs. 
Gottalotte, “is that so? Ain’t it too 
bad? They expected he was goin’ 
to be all right after he got his tonsils 
cut out.”—Chicago Record Herald. 
»? 
Oak Street 
Beverly Farms 
BEVERLY FARMS 
James J. Nugent is out again aft- 
er being confined to his home with 
a severe attack of grippe. 
The flag on G, A. R. hall has been 
half mast today in respect to the 
memory of one of its late members, 
Comrade George Walter Larcom, 
whose death yesterday reduces the 
number of members of Preston post 
to fifteen. 
Unclaimed letters at Beverly 
Farms P. O. week ending May 6, 
"14: C. L. Bruexr, Miss Odo Carlson, 
Mrs. C. Beebe, Michael Worden, Al- 
dis Flint, Mrs. Elizabeth Franks, P. 
W. Lancester, Charles M. Kelley, 
Edward McManus, Mrs. B. Miller 
(special delivery), Sally E. Neville, 
Mrs. Maurice K. Rica, L. Von Brun- 
ing—L. J. Watson, P. M. 
George W. Larcom. 
George Walter Larcom, 71, pas- 
sed away yesterday afternoon at the 
hospital of the Soldiers’ Home at 
Chelsea. He had been ill since last 
July, seriously at one time, but he 
improved to the extent that he was 
able to get out and about for a lit- 
tle while. He was born at Beverly 
Farms and has always lived here. 
Ife was a machinist by occupation, 
and worked for years in Boston at 
the round house of the old Boston 
& Providence R. R., but of. late 
years he has been interested in local 
livery stable business. He was a 
Civil War veteran and served in the 
navy throughout the war. He was 
an active member of Preston post, 
188. He was interested in public af- 
fairs and his kindly and genial dis- 
position made for him a host of 
friends. He leaves a sister, Miss 
Louise Larecom, two brothers, Mar- 
shall T. and Willie Larcom of Bev- 
erly Farms, and a son Guy Lareom 
of Salem. 
George Medealf, Pickett’s court. 
Mrs. Prescott was Miss Ada Med- 
ealf. 
The next meeting of the Beverly 
Farms branch of the Improvement 
society will be held at the home of 
Mrs. John M. Publicover, High st., 
on Wednesday afternoon, June 10. 
Master Charlie Collins of Hart st. 
was taken to the Beverly hospital, 
Wednesday evening and operated — 
opon for appendicitis. He is report- 
ed to be as comfortable as can be 
expected. 
Beverly Farms friends were much 
pleased yesterday to see their for- 
mer neighbor, John A. Ober, about 
town. Mr. Ober has been confined 
to his home at the Longworth estate 
with illness for some time past. 
Dr. Lyman Abbott of Alton, IIl., 
recently celebrated his 90th birth- 
day by preaching to his old congre- 
cation in his old chureh of that 
place. Dr. Abbott is a brother-in- 
law of Mrs. Samuel F. Collamore of 
Beverly Farms and formerly lived 
here. He was one of the important 
witnesses for the West Beach Corp. 
in the Preston-West Beach Corp. 
suit over land rights. 
Dept. officers of the S. of V. will 
visit Beverly Farms next Thursday 
evening and institute a new camp 
here of about twenty-five members. 
It will be called the Andrew Stand- 
ley camp in honor of a well known 
and prominent deceased G. A. R. 
veteran, who was the father of EI- 
mer Standley, to be the commander 
of the first camp. The event will 
be especially pleasant to the mem- 
bers of the Preston post, 188, G. A. 
_R., and will take place in G. A. R. 
hall. The members of the post and 
the Preston W. R. corps are invited 
to be present. 
Charles L. Williams, a chauffeur, 
who was killed on the Newburyport 
turnpike by the overturning of an 
automobile, was well known at Bey- 
erly Farms. His father, the late 
Foster Williams, was a former Bey- 
erly Farms resident and was a. 
brother of Fred, Alfred and Calvin 
Williams of Beverly Farms. Mr. 
Williams was here the day of the 
accident to attend the funeral of the 
late Mrs. Elsie Hawkins and while 
here visited his father’s grave at 
the local cemetery, little knowing 
that he was so soon to follow his 
late father. 
