64 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
DO YOU WANT CLEAN COAL that can be depended upon 
to always run uniform? 
Do YOU want delivery in canyas bags by 
AUTO TRUCK? 
Is your home in Beverly, Beverly Farms, Wenham, Hamilton, 
Then send your orders to 
Manchester, or Magnolia? 
Sprague, 
Tel. 280. Reverse the charge. 
Essex, 
Breed & Brown Co. 
Beverly, Mass. 
Poultry and Game 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTEB P. BREWER, Prop. 
Eggs and Butter 
Fruit and Berries 
The 
Best Quality 
Beverly Farms 
* 
M@eats and Provisions 
Orders will be 
Morning 
Collected Every 
and Promptly Filled. 
Mass. 
JAMES B. DOW 
Gardener and Florist 
Roses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse Products 
for Decoartions and Funeral Work. 
Hale Street 
Beverly Farms 
23 OHONONON BOW 
“ 
A full line of Stable Supplies, Trunks 
Bags and Leather Novelties 
Central Square, Beverly Farms 
> OB OBWOBOBOBOSS 
OBOBOBOBOBOBOBOBROBOROE 
Tel. 124-W Beverly Farms 
Boston Tel. 3416-W Back Bay 
NEW YORK AND BOSTON 
TAILORING COMPANY 
M. SILVERBERG, Prop. 
FINE CUSTOM TAILORS 
Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing a specialty 
Stable and Livery Suits made to order. Carefu 
attention to all work. Goods called for and 
delivered. 17th season. Prices reasonable. 
WEST ST. BEVERLY FARMS 
Lee 
Motor Boat MuFFrLinc AssocraTIon 
On August 4th Captain Grady of 
the Police Boat “Palm” presented 
eight complaints to the East Boston 
Court. Captain Hird, the Harbor 
A. © 
Importer and Manufacturer of 
Fine Harness, Riding Saddles and Horse Furnishings 
Also Auto 6o0aps, Greases and Oils 
BOMOM bos FRACIDACIO*‘S 
OM +e 3083 +e 
J. B. Dow John H. Cheever 
JAS. B. DOW & 0O 
Coal and Wood 
We are now prepared to deliver 
coal at short notice to all parts of 
Manchester and Beverly Farms. 
Beach Street Hale Street 
Manchester Beverly Farms 
BWOBOBOBOB BOMOKOBORY 
ULBERT 
Repairing in all its branches 
Driving and Auto Gloves 
Branch at Manchester 
BWONOMONONONONONONONORS 
BOHOMONONONONONONOH: 
BOM 
Master of Boston, presented sixteen 
complaints for boats belonging to T 
Wharf’ fishermen which were not 
muffled in a reasonable manner. ‘The 
defendants in the first four cases 
pleaded guilty, and upon the promise 
of counsel for all the fishermen that 
the entire fleet from ‘T’ Wharf would be 
muffled down, the four cases were 
placed on file, and the other cases 
were withdrawn. 
The muffling of this fleet should ef- 
fect some relief all along the North 
and South Shores of Massachusetts 
Bay. 
StouGHTON BELL, Counsel. 
Everybody reads the Breeze. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Mr. and Mrs, James EK. McDonnell 
left today for a week-end visit at 
Newfound Lake, N. H. 
Driver William S. Pike of the lad- 
der truck is enjoying his annual vaca- 
tion, a portion of which he will spend 
in Maine with Mrs, Pike. 
John J. Fox, aged 54, a stone-cut- 
ter and employed by local concerns, 
died suddenly in Salem last Tuesday. 
lar Woman Wuo Passed By” At 
B. F. Kerru’s THEATRE 
“The Woman Who Passed By,” a 
new dramatic comedy by Vincent A. 
Lawrence, the rising young Boston 
playwright, will be presented for the 
first time on any stage at B. F. Keith’s 
theatre next week. Mr. Lawrence, 
who is prominent in social and club 
circles in Boston, is the son of Frank 
W. Lawrence and one of the most 
promising of the younger generations 
of dramatists. ‘The Woman Who 
Passed By” is the first of his works to 
be produced by professionals. Frank 
Munroe, the famous Dectective Boyle 
of “Alias Jimmy Valentine,” will have 
the role of a sleuth in “The Woman 
Who Passed By,” while the part of 
the millionaire man of the world, who 
at least meets the woman of his 
dreams, will be played by Earle 
Ryder, late of the New York product- 
ion of “Joseph and His Brethren” at 
the Century Theatre. George Ernst, 
until recently a member of the Elea- 
nor Gordon Players, will have another 
important role, and Miss Lillian Nied- 
erauer, one of the most beautiful and 
accomplished young actresses in Bos- 
ton, will play “The Woman.” ‘This 
novelty will be surrounded by an ex- 
cellent vaudeville bill. 
GLOUCESTER Day Next WEEK 
The seventh annual Gloucester 
Day, scheduled for next Wednesday, 
August 13, if pleasant, promises to be 
the biggest in point of attractions of 
any ever held by the committee. The 
affair will, as usual, take place 
at Stage Fort Park and there will be 
everything from a baby show to an 
old time circus. “A day crowded with 
great events” is the language in which 
the Gloucesterites speak of their holi- 
day and they are making every effort 
to back up their statement. There will 
be something going on all day and in 
the evening until 10.30 at night, and 
special accommodations have been 
made by the steam and electric roads 
to care for the large crowds which al- 
ways attend a Gloucester Day. There 
will be a special train leaving Glouces- 
ter for Boston and way stations at 
11.00 p. m. 
