26 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Mrs. Elmer Standley, West st., 1s 
reported to be ill. 
Miss Margaret Bonvelt of Boston 
has spent the past week visiting Mrs. 
Charles H. ‘T'rowt, Pride’s Crossing. 
Wm. Votterus of Manchester, who 
has leased the Silverberg store on 
West st., is making interior altera- 
tions and improvements for an early 
opening. A fruit and confectionery 
store will be conducted there. 
James McMannus, the popular 
clerk at Brewer’s market, is a victim 
this week of the grippe. 
GRAND OPERA IN ENGLISH. 
The spring season of grand opera 
in English under the direction of 
Milton and Sargent Aborn opened at 
the Boston Theatre last Monday 
night to a large enthusiastic audience, 
the initial offering being “Aida,” 
which was scheduled for three more 
performances in the first half of the 
week. The four performances of 
the latter half of the week are oc- 
—— 
OR CURRENCY. 
If you travel, the best 
way to carry your funds is 
in Traveler’s cheques. We 
furnish you with 
American Banker’s Associ- 
can 
ation or American Express 
Company Traveler's 
checks. They are self iden- 
tifying and offer the safest 
sort of travel money. 
Beverly 
National Bank 
A. W. Rogers, President 
J. R. Pope, Vice President 
E. S. Webber, Cashier 
SAFER THAN COIN 
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E. 
Cc. 
April 9, 1915 
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 ir 
First-Class Work 
BEVERLY 
Telephone: Factory 158-M Residence 449-W 
cupied with Puccini’s “Madam But- 
terfly,’ with many of the 
artists in the alternating casts. 
The first three nights and Wednes- 
day matinee of the coming week will 
be given to Wagner’s majestic 
“Lohengrin.” The last three nights 
and Saturday matinee will be devot- 
ed to Verdi’s evergreen favorite, “Il 
Trovatore.” Beside these eight 
regular performances, there will be 
extra matinee performances of 
“Haensel and Gretel” on Tuesday 
Saime 
and Friday, April 13th and 16th. 
For the accommodation of school 
children and _ out-of-town patrons, 
the curtain will rise at three o’clock, 
—an hour later than usual,—at these 
“Haensel and Gretel’ matinees. The 
prices at all performances range 
from twenty-five cents to one dollar, 
and seats are on sale for all perform- 
ances of the coming two weeks. 
Cort THEATRE, Boston 
It is rather an unusual occurence 
but speaks volumes for a play that 
finds it profitable at the termination 
of its engagement at one theatre to 
move to another playhouse in the 
same city. Such, however, is the 
case with that most delightful bit of 
Scottish fiction, “Kitty MacKay” that 
has been playing at another Boston 
theatre and moved to the Cort for 
the week of April 5 beginning Easter 
Monday night. = 
Following “Kitty MacKay” the 
Cort will have for their next attrac- 
tion beginning Monday, April 12, 
“A Modern Eve” an operetta that 
has been the musical sensation of 
Europe. 
It was the one play that survived 
the sultry months in Chicago last 
summer and rounded out twenty 
weeks in that city. 
Princess RAJAH AND Karr JoRN 
Ae peer KGET Ss 
Princess Rajah, the world’s great- 
est Oriental dancer, will come to B. 
F. Keith’s Theatre the week of April 
12th, as one of the features of a gi- 
HAVE YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS 
FILLED AT 
DELANEY’S 
Aputherary 
Cabot and Abbott Streets 
BEVERLY 
We keep everything that a good 
drug store should keep. 
Cor. 
Telephone Connection 
S. A. GENTLEE & SON 
Funeral Directors and Embalmers 
Calls answered day or night 
277 Cabot Street 
Residence, 16 Butman St. BEVERLY 
M. C. Horton, Acent 
7 Brook St. Manchester, Mass. 
gantic all-star bill. Rajah will ap- 
pear in a superb spectacular scenic 
production of her wonderful “Cleo- 
patra Dance,” supported by a large 
company. She will also present the 
Arabian Chair Dance, the most re- 
markable exnibition of strength ever 
placed upon a_ stage. Other big 
headliners of the week will include 
Carl Jorn, the renowned Wagnerian 
tenor from the Metropolitan Opera 
House in New York City, with a 
splendid repertoire of popular selec- 
tions; James and Bonnie Thornton, 
the King and Queen of Variety, of- 
fering a series of songs and dances; 
Jesse L. Lasky’s “Society Buds,” a 
big musical comedy production with 
Gladys Clark and Henry Bergman, 
assisted by a big company of twenty 
singers, dancers, comedians, and 
pretty girls. 
The bashful lover is just as liable 
to make a domineering husband as 
the fresh guy. 
“The way of the transgressor is 
hard,’’ but it seems to be mostly 
down hill—Pittsburg Sun. 
A dutiful son will follow in the 
footsteps of a pretty girl sooner 
than in those of his father—Deseret 
News. 
