NORTH SHORE 
COMPENSATION 
(R. W. E.) 
To every grain of wit 
There is a grain of folly. 
Every grain brings loss with it. 
Oh, the melancholy! 
If with eager clutch 
The gatherer hoard too much, 
Nature, in infinite jest, 
i Takes out of the man 
What he puts in his chest. 
She, a liberal donor, 
Swells the estate, 
But soon or late, 
Kills the owner. 
Nature hates monopolies 
And exceptions such as these. 
J. A. Torrey. 
Tne MANCHESTER-BEVERLY Farms 
_ BASEBALL, SERIES 
Baseball fans hereabout are greatly 
interested in the Manchester-Beverly 
Farms series which opens at Manches- 
ter this Saturday. Both teams are in 
the best of condition and have been 
playing great ball most all season. 
Some strong matches are therefore 
expected when they meet. It will be 
the best three out of five games. This 
year Manchester considers her team 
to be the strongest they have ever had 
and they have great hopes of winning 
the series. Beverly Farms, on the 
other hand, is just as confident. It 
is expected this series will be the most 
hotly contested ever held in this sec- 
tion. Both teams have submitted a 
list of fifteen players eligible to play 
in the series as follow: 
Manchester—Collins, Grover, Gott, 
Walen, Bond, O’Leary, Crafts, Gray, 
McCarthy, Gannett, Gillis, Culbert- 
son, Noyes, Slade, Mahoney. 
Beverly Farms—McNair, Muller, 
Perkins, Sudbay, Hillery, Hopkins, 
Goldsmith, Welch, McPherson, Has- 
kell, Parsons, Lindholm, Hartz, Mehl- 
man, Mellow. 
Last Saturday’s game was one of 
the best of the season. Grover struck 
out 18 men and did not allow a single 
run. Manchester got five runs in the’ 
first inning, two in the second, and did 
not score again throughout the game. 
The game was with the Neptune 
Athletic club of Newburyport. 
Miss Gertrude Goldsmith returned 
yesterday from a_ year’s absence in 
California, where she has been attend- 
ing a university. She has traveled ex- 
tensively this summer on the way 
home. 
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BREEZE and Reminder 65 
The Hollis Burgess Yacht Agency has sold the 30- 
foot motor life boat “Sea Duck,” owned by William Wal- 
lace of Boston to Joshua Crane of Westwood, for use 
at No Man’s Land, and the 24-foot waterline sloop yacht 
“Enola,” owned by Charles H. Waterman of Scituate, 
Mass., to Dr. William F. Whitney of Boston; and the 
30-foot waterline sloop yacht “Pontiac,” owned by Dr. 
William F. Whitney of Boston to Hollis Burgess. 
The 
same agency has chartered the 47-foot waterline auxiliary 
yawl “Narkeeta,” owned by A. S. Dexter of Boston to 
Charles F. Ayer of Hamilton; the 39-foot waterline sloop 
“Becky,” owned by Dr. Morton Prince of Boston to 
Frederick Ayer, Jr., of Boston; the 49-foot motor boat 
“Tdlewild,” owned by B. F. Wild of Boston, to N. L. R. 
MANCHESTER 
Miss Scerry of Boston is visiting 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hoare, Lincoln 
sti 
Miss Gertrude Ryan of the Loweil 
General hospital is in town for a two 
weeks’ vacation. 
The lawn party of the Sacred Heart 
church was held in the grounds ad- 
joining the church last night. 
The seventh annual ball of the 
Manchester drug clerks will be held 
in ‘Town hall this evening. 
Mrs. Anna Woodbury is entertain- 
ing her two sisters, Mrs. Mark Rob- 
inson of Coraopolis, Penn., and Mrs. 
Samuel Turner of Olean, N. Y. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Allen of 
Brooklyn are in town for a visit with 
Mr. Allen’s sister, Mrs. Raymond C. 
Allen, Vine st. 
COMMUNICATION 
Editor North Shore Breeze, 
Dear Sir: 
I want to acknowledge through the 
courtesy of your columns the high 
tribute which was paid to the antt- 
suffragists the other night by Miss 
Foley when she said that if woman’s 
suffrage came the antis would be the 
first to vote. Should woman’s suf- 
frage ever come in Massachusetts it 
would be the duty of every woman to 
cast her ballot in the first election fol- 
lowing. Can anything higher be said 
of any people than that they see their 
duties as occasion brings them, and 
seeing them they let no thought of 
personal preference interfere with 
their fulfillment? I should last week 
have acknowledged this tribute from 
a suffragist to those of the opposite 
faith had I not been called away fron: 
home by a severe accident to a mem- 
ber of my family. 
Mrs. WinttAM LowELL, PUTMAN. 
Gardner of Providence, R. I.; and the Herreshoff 21- 
foot sloop “Hazel,” to a Boston yachtsman. 
Bonus Grven on Forp Cars 
Perkins & Corliss, agents for the 
Ford Cotor Co., on Cape Ann and ia 
Magnolia and Manchester and Essex, 
make announcement that the new 
prices on Ford automobiles which 
have been the subject of considerable 
interest by car owners of late will be 
granted purchasers between August i 
of this year and August 1 of 1915, 
the only stipulation being that the 
Ford company can reach an output 
of 300,000 cars between those dates. 
In view of the: tremendous business 
which this company has always. done, 
this seems to be entirely probable and 
North Shore buyers of Ford cars will 
have an opportunity of sharing with 
the profits of from $40 to $60. This 
profit sharing with customers will be 
possible only through reduced costs 
in factory and agencies following the 
sale of the 300,000 cars. Considering 
the fact that the company has soid 
221,888 cars in the past twelve months 
and at considerably. higher prices 
than those specially quoted the saie 
ef 300,000 would not be an abnormal] 
increase Perkins & Corliss are the 
only authorized agents for Ford cars 
in the district which includes Glou- 
cester, Rockport, Manchester, Mag- 
nolia, Lanesville, Annisquam and Es- 
sex. Should anybody in that section 
purchase a Ford through any other 
party they would be entitled to the 
rebate of $40 to $60 on August 1, 
1915. 
The miitary ball of Col. H. P. 
Woodbury camp, S. of V., last Fri- 
day evening was a success both. so- 
cially and financially. The money re- 
ceived is to be deposited toward the 
building fund. 
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