18 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
BEVERLY FARMS 
The Girls’ club of the Baptist 
church held a pretty dress party in 
the chapel last evening. It was a 
most enjoyable affair. 
The regular monthly business meet- 
ing of the members of the Beverly 
Farms fire department will be held 
at the fire station next Monday eve- 
ning. 
The erection of a building has com- 
menced on the lot on Hale st., form- 
erly owned by Connolly Bros. and 
recently sold to Otis Dunham. It is 
understood that the building will be 
a tea house and headquarters in this 
section for the distribution of Page 
& Shaw’s candies. 
Next Tuesday, election day, the 
polls will be open from 6 a. m. to 4 
p.m. In Ward 6 the voting place 
will be in the lower part of G. A. R. 
hall where the old library was located. 
This change will give as ample quar- 
ters as the hall above and will save 
the voters from climbing a fight of 
stairs. 
| Service Service 
If you have an account 
at the Beverly Nation- 
al bank you know the 
service you get—up to 
date in every detail, 
efficient and courteous. 
If you do not have an 
account we invite you 
to open one with us 
and test this satisfying 
service. 
BEVERLY NATIONAL 
BANK 
Ae We 
J. R. Pope, Vice President 
E. S. Webber, 
Rogers, President 
Cashier 
EsorG. 
Noy. 3, 1916. 
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 i 
First-Class Work 
BEVERLY 
Telephone: Factory 158-M; Residence 449-W 
The Ladies Sewing circle was en- 
tertained last evening by Mrs. Elmer 
Standley at her home, West st. 
Essex County Rep Cross NAMES 
OFFICERS. 
The Essex county chapter of the 
American Red Cross elected Gen. 
Francis H. Appleton of Peabody as 
its chairman, at its annual meeting, 
held Saturday in the Beverly public 
library, 
The following officers were also 
chosen: Vice-chairman, David Black, 
Beverly; secretary, Miss Louisa P. 
Loring, Pride’s Crossing; treasurer, 
Fred H. Porter, Beverly ; executive 
committee, Miss Bessie A. Baker, 
Beverly; Mrs. J. Warren Merrill, 
Manchester; John Endicott Peabody, 
Salem; F. W. Perkins, Lynn; Dr. F. 
W. Snow, Newburyport; and George 
W. Woodbury, Gloucester. 
Gen. Appleton presided at the 
meeting and Miss Loring gave a 
resume of the work done during the 
last year, emphasizing the facts that 
21 shipments had been made to the 
Mexican border and that 600 new 
members had been enrolled. The 
county membership now totals more 
than 1200. 
Mr. Black also spoke at yesterday’s 
meeting and Miss M. E. Gladwin, 
formerly superintendent of the Bev- 
erly hospital, described the Red Cross 
work she had been called on to per- 
form in Serbia. 
“Hp, Hip, Hooray.” 
The long-heralded, much discussed 
New York Hippodrome show, eu- 
phoniously and appropriately entitled, 
“Hip, Hip, Hooray,” will begin its 
engagement in Boston at the Boston 
Opera House on Monday evening, 
Nov. 13. A new stage will be con- 
structed in the spectacular ice ballet 
which was the talk of the entire coun- 
try last year. Charles Dillingham’s 
plan is to reproduce exactly the great 
pageant which broke all records at 
the big playhouse in New York last 
season, 
HAVE YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS 
FILLED AT 
Delaney’s 
Aputherary 
Cor. Cazot AND AppotrT STREETS 
BEVERLY 
We keep everything that a good 
drug store should keep. 
5. A. Gentlee & Son 
S. A. GENTLEE 
TEL. 893-w 
Cc. H. GENTLEE 
TEL. 893-R 
UNDERTAKERS 
277 CABOT STREET, 
Beverly 
TEL. 480 
Calls Answered Anywhere Day or Night 
‘ea Cd 
John Philip Sousa and his band 
head the remarkable organization, 
which is the largest that has ever 
toured America. It will also include, 
Charlotte, the marvelous. skating 
queen, together with the other im- 
ported ice skaters from the Admiral’s 
Palace, Berlin. 
There will be 400 in the énsoaeimees 
mostly pretty girls—and the entire 
crganization, it is said, will be .the 
most pretentious that the theatrical 
producer has tried to take en tour. 
A teacher had told a class of juy- 
enile pupils that Milton, the poet, was 
blind. The next day she asked if any. 
of them could remember what Mil- 
ton’s great affliction was. “Yes’t;” 
replied one little fellow.. “He was-a 
poet.” . 
