BEVERLY FARMS 
Owing to the mission which is to 
be conducted at St. Margaret’s church 
for the next two weeks a number of 
dances which were to be held at 
Neighbor’s hall have been cancelled 
temporarily. 
__ The first game of the Manchester- 
Beverly Farms series will be played 
tomorrow at the Manchester play- 
grounds. The teams seem to be 
quite evenly matched and some close 
games are looked for. There will be 
many Farms fans on hand for the 
game. 
' Misses Veronica and Rose Con- 
nolly of Waltham are visiting their 
4 cousins, the Misses Connolly, Oak st. 
_ Walter B. Wright returned to his 
- duties at the West st. fire station 
after a vacation of two weeks the 
i greater part of which he spent en- 
joying cottage life at Chebacco lake. 
Miss Virginia Crown of Somer- 
ville is visiting Beverly Farms, a 
guest of Miss Caroline Standley, 
= Oak st. 
__ The temperature of the water at 
‘. West beah has been hovering about 
70 degrees all the week and this has 
made bathing all the more popular. 
Large crowds have made this their 
recreation spot the last few days. 
_ Miss Alice F. Pearson of Stam- 
ford, Conn., was a visitor at the 
Farms this week. 
__ Last Saturday at Gloucester the 
“Farms ball team lost to the Knights 
“of King Arthur by a 2 to 1 score, 
errors on the part of the Farms men 
being largely responsible for the loss 
of the game. Lothrop, the Gloucester 
‘pitcher, twirled a fine game and al- 
lowed only a few scattering hits. The 
game was played on Webster’s field 
hefore a large crowd. The same 
‘teams will play again in Gloucester 
on the afternoon of Labor Day. 
__A mission of two weeks. starts 
Sunday at St. Margaret’s church 
given by the Jesuit Fathers of Bos- 
ton. Next week the mission will be 
for women and the following for 
men. 
_ Mayor MacDonald has named 
Augustus P. Loring, Jr., for a one- 
year term on the new planning board 
of the city. 
The Leslie Vaudeville Co. is to 
give an entertainment in Neighbor’s 
hall next Tuesday evening. 
Russel Cadigan and John Toomey 
are members of the temperance so- 
iety ball team in Beverly. Both men 
are playing fast ball for the nine. 
Driver Wm. S. Pike and engineer 
alter B. Wright of the Farms fire 
department took part in the firemen’s 
parade at Lynn Tuesday. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
eee 
THE THISSELL COMPANY 
High Grade 
Post Office Building 
Twe Phones, 150 and 151 
CHURCH NOTICES 
BEVERLY Farms 
St. Joun’s Cuurcu (Episcopal). 
The Rev. John W. Suter, Minister-in- 
charge. First Sunday in each month, 
at 10 a.m. Celebration of the Holy 
Communion, with sermon. All other 
Sundays, at 10 a. m., Morning Prayer 
and Sermon. 
Rey. J. J. Dimon of Washington 
will take the service, Sunday, Aug. 
16. 
Another of the popular band’ con- 
certs by the Beverly Farms band will 
be held next Wednesday evening at 
8 o'clock in the square. Everybody 
invited. 
The Standley Shoe Store will close 
on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri- 
days at 6.00 p. m.; on Tuesdays, 
Thursdays and Saturdays at 9.00 p. 
m. adv. 
J. Theodore Voorneveldt, aged 49 
years, 5 months, a gardener employed 
at the new Miller estate at Beverly 
Cove, died suddenly last Monday 
morning from heart failure. An em- 
ployee on the estate wished to see him 
and hunted him up, finding the body 
in the stable, where the man had evi- 
dently passed away at his work. He 
was born in Holland and is survived 
by a wife and four children. Last 
March he took charge of the new 
Miller estate at Chapman’s corner, 
moving to the Cove. He had previ- 
ously lived at Beverly Farms and was 
superintendent at the Thomas M. Mc- 
Kee estate. The deceased was a 
member of Bass River lodge and 
Summit encampment, I. O. O. F. and 
the Knights of Pythias. Funeral ser- 
vices were held from his late resi- 
dence yesterday afternoon. 
Last Sunday a_ hydroaeroplane 
landed off West Beach and tied up 
at the pier. It proved quite a curi- 
osity for the many people there, who 
had an opportunity to inspect the ma- 
chine at close range. 
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Arnold of 
Groton, Conn., have spent this week 
with friends at the Farms. 
‘No Use 
When visiting the wounded men in 
a field hospital an army chaplain came 
to one poor fellow who was groaning 
pitifully. 
_ “Come, my poor fellow, bear the 
Food Products 
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, 5.30a. 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 Ha ness, Trunks, 
Bags and all Leather Goods a Specialty. 
BEVERLY FARMS Opp. B. & M. Depot 
F. W. VARNEY 
Reyistered 
Apntherary 
BEVERLY FARMS 
AY AKES a specialty of com- 
pounding physicians’ 
prescriptions. This depart- 
ment is fully stocked with 
reliable and up-to-date rem- 
edies and is constantly under 
_the supervision of Graduates 
of Pharmacy of 
perience. 
long ex- 
New York and Boston Daily and 
Sunday Papers 
Two Telephones; 77, 8202 
If one is busy, call the other 
ifn, Te siete 
Tel. 124-W Beverly Farms. 
NEW YCRK AND BOSTON 
TAILORING COMPANY 
M. SILVERBERG, Proprietor 
FINE CUSTOM TAILORS 
Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing a 
Specialty. Chauffeur, Stable and 
Livery Suits Made to Order. 
28 WEST ST., BEVERLY FARMS 
Boston Store: 206 Mass. Ave. 
pene 
-— 
pain like a man,” said the chaplain. 
“It’s no use kicking against fate.” 
“Bedad, sorr,’ murmured the suf- 
ferer, “you’re right, especially when, 
as in my case, they’re the fate of an 
army mule,” Saal 
sedi ews 
