50 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
BEVERLY T RUST COMPANY 
Beverly and Beverly Farms 
BRANCH OFFICE Cor. Hale & 
West Sts., Beverly Farms, 
for the convenience of our 
Depositors. 
Deposits may be made and 
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Telephone 78-M Beverly Farms 
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BEVERLY FARMS 
SHEPHERD OF KINGDOM 
Comer.” 
The Plymouth Theatre, now under 
the management of the Messrs Shu- 
bert, has opened for the season with 
“The Little Shepherd of Kingdom 
Come,” adapted from the novel of 
the same name by John Fox, Jr., by 
Kugene Walter, who so successfully 
arranged the same author’s “Trail of 
the Lonesome Pine” for the stage. 
The second week will begin next 
Monday, September 11. 
The thousands of readers of the 
novel will immediately recognize the 
characters of the play as old acquaint- 
ances. ‘The story concerns the same 
type of Kentucky mountaineers that 
figures in both novels. Their loves 
and hates and their awful feuds back 
in the late fifties when the first rum- 
Fel Laer o 
Sept. 8, 1916. 
TUNIPOO INN 
BEVERLY FARMS 
MASS. 
MOST attractive rooms, modern conveniences, large verandas, near 
West Beach, yachting, bathing and fishing, best motor roads in 
State, 36 trains daily, 40 minutes from Boston. 
The TUNIPOO is 
the first INN ever conducted at Beverly Farms. 
Telephone Beverly Farms 8210 or write P. O. Box 1126 
Automobile parties accommodated. 
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Give your order for new service or any changes. 
in service at once, so. that your correct number 
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Contracts taken at Central 
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NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH COMPANY 
IRVING W. ROLFE, Manager 
blings of national strife were begin- 
ning to be heard are all shown. In 
the play there is a feud between the 
families of Turner and Dillon, which 
hinges upon the guilt or innocence of 
Jack, the boy, by no means an incon- 
gruous actor in the play, and who is 
charged with sheep-killing. 
“KATINKA.” 
No such tremendous hit has been 
made in years by a musical comedy 
as that of “Katinka” at the Shubert 
Theatre, Boston. 
““Katinka’ is sure to be as popular 
as its two predecessors, ‘High Jinks’ 
and “The Firefly,’ said one enthusias- 
tic reviewer after the New York pre- 
mier last fall of the famous musical 
play which is seen at this theatre for 
a limited engagement. 
Time has proved that the prophet 
was not over-enthusiastic, but rather 
lukewarm in his praise, for the new 
musical offering of Otto Hauerbach 
and Rudolf Friml, responsible for 
‘High Jinks’ and ‘The Firefly,’ not 
cnly lived up to the reputation of the» 
former two but greatly eclipsed them, 
both in drawing power and the crea- 
tion of enthusiasm in the audiences. 
The third week of the engagement 
at the Shubert Theatre will begin 
next Monday, Sept. 11. 
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