34 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
oS 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Hooper of 
Greenfield, have been visiting friends 
at Beverly Farms the past week. 
Miss Alice F. Pearley of Rockland, 
Me., has been among the visitors at 
Beverly Farms the past week. 
The hot days of this week have at- 
tracted quite a gathering at West 
Beach, and many have been in bath- 
ing. The corporation directors have 
secured the services of a Beverly man 
to take charge of the pavilion for the 
summer. 
It is now Station Agent Arthur C. 
Holland at the Beverly Farms station, 
the transfer being made last Monday 
and will last until Mr. McDonald re- 
turns to duty in the early fall. Agent 
Holland will have for an assistant and 
operator Charles Elliott of Gloucester. 
Miss Henrietta Townsend will 
graduate from Salem Normal School 
in June, and her sister, Ethel Town- 
send, will graduate from the Man- 
chester High school. Both young la- 
KEEPING 
THE PACE 
In banking business 
A ki Qin tole 
line of activity one 
must keep up with the 
times. 
The Beverly National 
Bank has skept pace 
with the times. It is 
strong, vigorous and 
progressives elst 1s! va 
good bank to do busi- 
ness with. If you are 
not a depositor we 
would welcome your 
account. 
Beverly 
National Bank 
A. W. Rogers, President 
J. R. Pope, Vice President 
E. S. Webber, Cashier 
Ee. 
SAWYER 
Established 1877 
CARRIAGE AND AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING 
NEW COVERINGS, TOPS and SLIP LININGS for AUTOMO- 
BILES. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALTERATIONS 
Special Department for Automobiles 
Painting and Varnishing 
218-236 Rantoul Street, Cor. Bow Street a3 
First-Clasa Work 
BEVERLY 
Telephone: Factory 158-M Residence 449-W 
dies have been residents of Beverly 
Farms until their recent moving to 
West Manchester. 
The baseball game at the Beverly 
Farms playgrounds on Saturday 
morning between the Beverly Farms 
team and the strong Fr. Matthews of 
Salem will attract a large attendance. 
Manager Holland has 
strong line-up, probably one of the 
best ever put on the field here for 
Beverly Farms. New suits have been 
ordered and will probably be ready 
for Saturday’s game. McNair and 
Perkins will be the battery for Bev- 
erly Farms. 
The exercises for Memorial Day 
will be carried out as per program 
printed in last week’s issue. Preston 
Post, 188, headed by the police, Bev- 
erly Farms band and escorted by An- 
drew Standley camp, S. of V., and 
members of the Fire Dept., at 2 
o’clock will march to the cemetery 
where the graves of the soldier and 
sailor dead will be decorated after 
which services will be held at the Sol- 
diers’ monument. The line will then 
be formed again, joined by Preston 
W.R. Corps, No. 93, and the school 
children, and the march will be to 
West Beach where the W. R. C. will 
hold their exercises. In the evening 
at the Baptist church the usual servi- 
ces will be held and an address deliv- 
ered by Past Dept. Commander Al- 
fred S. Roe of Worcester. All are 1n- 
vited to join and help make the ever- 
cises both afternoon and evening a 
success. 
Mary Nasu at KertrnH’s 
Mary Nash, late star of “The City” 
and “The Lure,” and one of the most 
popular and cleverest of the younger 
generation of legitimate actresses, 
will make her first vaudeville appear- 
ance at B. F. Keith’s next week in a 
one-act comedy by Vida Weiman en- 
titled “The Watch Dog.” Miss Nash’s 
rise to fame upon the legitimate stage 
has been rapid in the last few years, 
and she has not been seen in Boston 
since the long run of “The City,” the 
secured a’ 
HAVE YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS 
FILLED AT 
DELANEY’S 
APOTHECARY 
Cor. Cabot and Abbott Streets 
BEVERLY 
We keep everything that a good drug store 
should keep. 
Telephone Connection 
8. A. GENTLEE & 8ON 
Funeral Directors and Embalmers 
Calls answered day or night 
277 Cabot Street 
Residence, 16 Bane St. BEVERLY 
famous drama by Clyde Fitch that at- 
tracted so much notice and comment, 
during its Boston engagement. For 
her vaudeville tour Miss Nash has 
been exceptionally fortunate in the 
choice of a vehicle. Her new playlet 
is described as a one-act drama of ab- 
sorbing and amazing surprises. Miss 
Nash will be supported by a most 
capable company. The surrounding 
bill includes a number of features ex- 
ceptionally appropriate for the early 
summer. 
In THE Days OF OLD 
“How these laundries do mangle 
your shirts of mail!” said Sir Tance- 
iot. 
“Yes, mine always come back shy 
several rivets,” assented Sir Gink.— 
Pittsburg Post. 
Ture LAwyer’s ADVENTURE 
Brown—Have you heard of the ad- 
venture of old Jehones, the lawyer? 
Chown-—No—what was that? 
Brown—Why, he went out to 
bathe yesterday, and encountered a 
huge shark. Their eyes met for an 
instant, then the shark blushed and 
swam away. 
The Breeze $2.00 a year postpaid. 
