~ Common lane. 
Nov. 10, 1916, 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
ss BEVERLY FARMS 
ve ~ Mrs. Lydia Williams entertained 
» the Ladies’ Sewing circle at her 
home, Hart st., last evening. 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Harring- 
ton of Rochester, N. H., have spent 
the past week at Beverly Farms visit- 
tag friends. 
‘Good progress is being made on the 
new house for Elisha S. Pride on 
He expects it will be 
ready for occupancy by Christmas. 
The wedding of Edward Kelly of 
Toston and Pride’s Crossing and Miss 
Margaret Torney of Pride’s Crossing 
will take place next Wednesday, 
Nov. 15. 
The Philip Cross estate, Hale st., 
has been sold and the purchaser is 
understood to be the owner of nearby 
property. The property consists of 
a frame dwelling house and 10,890 
square feet of land with a frontage on 
Hale st. 
Mr. Iggleden of New York is the 
new superintendent of the “Spauld- 
ing Gardens” on Greenwood ave., re- 
cently purchased by Albert C. Bur- 
rage. Mr. Burrage has also purchased 
the Robert Saltonstall (Susan Cabot) 
estate at Pride’s Crossing. 
A coming wedding of interest to 
Beverly Farms young people is that 
of Miss Pearl Logan and Dennis Kel- 
leher. Miss Logan is a member of 
the Samuel Vaughan household. Mr. 
Kelleher is a well known Beverly 
Farms young man and has just re- 
turned from the Mexican border 
where he went as a member of Bat- 
tery F. 
Lieut. Herman <A. Macdonald, 
Nathaniel S. Simpkins, Jr., and Den- 
nis Kelleher, the Beverly Farms mem- 
bers of Battery F, who arrived home 
from the Mexican border last week, 
have been busy shaking hands and 
answering the questions of their 
Farms friends. They made a splen- 
did appearance in their neat unti- 
forms; they are tanned and the pic- 
ture of health. 
With the state and national elec- 
tions safely over Ward 6 is now turn- 
ing its attention to city affairs. There 
will probably be several candidates 
for mayor of Beverly. Beverly 
Farms is particularly interested in the 
candidacy of Mayor Herman A. Mac- 
donald, who has recently returned 
from four months’ service on the 
Mexican border. Many have ex- 
pressed their approval of the steward- 
ship of Ald. Thomas D. Connolly and 
urge him to be a candidate for re- 
election as alderman from Ward 6. 
TREE PRUNING aii 
Everything in Forestry —~ 
Poultry and Game 
Eggs and _ Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
The best Quality 
Miss Alice R. Fearing of Williams- 
town has been among the visitors to 
Beverly Farms the past week. 
Dr. and Mrs. Cornelius J. Murray 
(Inez Wentworth), whose wedding 
took place recently, are keeping house 
at 35 Hart st. 
Henry Williams, for several years 
order clerk at Brewer’s Market, has 
secured a good position in one of 
soston’s best markets for the winter. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. McCarthy 
have moved into the Trowt home- 
stead, Vine st., occupying apartments 
recently vacated by Walter B. 
Wright. 
At Tuesday’s election, Ward 6 
votes showed the great interest that 
was taken in the various contests. 
There were 298 votes cast, Hughes 
receiving 173, Wilson 106; McCal! 
183, Mansfield 86; Lodge 168, Fitz- 
gerald 92; Gardner 190, Howard 59; 
Raymond 168, Hoare 75. 
Lawrence J. Watson, 2nd, of Bay 
Side, L. I., has been at the Farms a 
portion of the past week and while 
here voted at Tuesday’s election. Mr. 
Watson was a resident of this place 
until two months ago when he moved 
to his present home to be nearer his 
place of business in New York City. 
A fine new auto bus has been run- 
ning between Beverly and Beverly 
Farms at times during the past week, 
but no regular schedule has been kept. 
The new bus is owned by A. Socco of 
Beverly. The venture is similar to 
the other attempts. The public is not 
informed that a line is to be put in- 
to operation and about the time it 
learns of the fact and gets the habit 
of depending upon the bus, it will 
stop running. 
Patronize Breeze Advertisers. 
LARCOM THEATRE, BEVERLY. 
Nov. 13 and 14—Mabel Taliaferro 
in “God’s  Half-Acre.” Burton 
Holmes’ “Travel Picture.” 
Nov. 15 and 16—Marie Doro in 
“The Lash.” Billy Burke in “Gloria’s 
Romance.” “Pathe News. 
Noy. 17 and 18—Blanche Sweet in 
“The Storm.” “Comedy Picture.” 
“The Shielding Shadow,” chapter one. 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P, BREWER, Prop. 
Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
17 
CopLey THEATRE. 
At the Copley Theatre, where the 
Hen1y Jewett Players have establish- 
ed a permanent repertory company, 
the presentation for the week of Nov. 
13th will be Sardon’s famous comedy 
of love and intrigue, “Diplomacy.” 
This wonderful play is universally 
considered to be the great French 
dramatist’s masterpiece. None of his 
other great works—including “Ma- 
dame Sans -Géne,” “A Scrap of 
Paper, “Liat Tosca,” and): “Fedora” 
has been so repeatedly and success- 
fully revived. Only last year it was 
honored again with a _ noteworthy 
New York production which included 
no less celebrities than William Gil- 
lette, Blanche Bates and Marie Doro. 
It is a play that tells an exceptional 
and romantic story and tells it in 
action. 
The characters are individual, na- 
tural and sharply contrasted and the 
plot is developed by means of ingen- 
ious expedients of invention such as 
arouse eager interest and maintain a 
suspense seldom found in the theatre. 
“THE CINDERELLA MAN.” 
As clean and sweet as a mountain 
rill is “The Cinderella Man,” the new 
Oliver Morosco success which comes 
to the Wilbur Theatre, Boston, next 
Monday, November 13, with the same 
cast of players that interpreted this 
delightful romance at the Hudson 
Theatre, New York, including Shelley 
Hull, Phoebe Foster, Frank Bacon, 
Charles Lane, Berton Churchill, Reg- 
inald Mason, Hubert Wilke, Theo- 
dore Babcock, Louise Rial, Percival 
Moore and others. 
Edward Childs Carpenter, the au- 
thor, has given the public in Marjorie 
Caner a character, true to life, a sim- 
ple, yet strong-minded American girl, 
who has lost her mother. She does 
not know her father, her parents hav- 
ing been separated. She has lived 
abroad through the years of her short 
life. 
The death of her mother takes her 
back to her father, a grim, powerful 
man. There is a clash between father 
and daughter. 
R. E. HENDERSON 
BOX 244, BEVERLY. MASS. 
Telephone. 
