8 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
A. J. ORR 
Soctety Motes 
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Heaton are back 
to Beverly Farms after spending several 
months in Florida. 
Mr. and Mrs. Eben D. Jordan and 
daughter, Miss Dorothy Jordan, were 
latest heard from at Cannes, France, on 
their extensive motoring tour. 
Mrs. Gordon Hughes of Long Branch, 
N. J., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Thos. 
a a PAINTING AND 
2"a PAPER-HANGING 
Dealer in PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, PUTTY, ETG. 
A full line af PATTON’S SUNPROOF PAINT and Specialties. 
Bennett Street, Pecenone Manchester, Mass. 
Opposite High School 
Specimen #& Evergreen 
SUITABLE FOR TUBS AND VASES 
Retinosporas, Cedar, Spruce, Pine, Hemlock, Arbor Vitae Box Trees 
W. Pierce, who is now settled in the and everything in Hardy Stock for Lawn and Landscape Planting. 
Larson cottage, Hart street, Beverly TELEPHONE NO. 92___ 
Farms. The Pierce Nursery 2 Beverly Farms, [lass, 
Miss Frances H. Stearns, who has 
been spending the winter at the Bruns- 
wick, in Boston, was registered at the 
Manhattan hotel, New York city, the 
first of this week, and she has gone down 
to Atlantic City to spend the week-end. 
Miss Stearns plans to open her villa at 
Magnolia May 1. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Grew, who sailed 
some weeks ago for Europe, intending 
to pay a visit to their son and daughter-in- 
law in St. Petersburg, are still in Paris, 
where they were detained because of Mr. 
Grew’s illness. They expect to return on 
the return trip of the Oceanic, which 
left Boston Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. 
Joseph Grew made the trip to Paris to 
see Mr. Grew’s parents. Mr. and 
Mrs. Grew will come to their West 
Manchester estate the latter part of May. 
‘The interesting feature of the session 
of the Essex probate court held in Salem 
Monday was the notice of the resigna- 
tion of Col. George R. Jewett of Salem 
as executor of the will of the late Susan 
B. Cabot of the Beverly Cove summer 
colony. Col. Jewett was a_ beneficiary 
under the will to the amount of nearly a 
quarter of amillion dollars. Mrs. Cabot 
died a year ago and the estate was well 
along in process of settlement. In place 
of Col. Jewett, the court appointed, at 
the request of the beneficiaries under the 
will, Neal Rantoul and John L. Salton- 
stall, and each has given bonds to the 
amount of $1,000,000. The causes of 
the resignation of Col. Jewett are not 
stated. 
Diamonds 
Watches 
Clocks 
Silverware 
160 Cabot Street, 
We note a few items. 
prog BEA BIASES Bs BES DEL PS Ba — ae 
WILBUR J. 
(Successor to Pierce & Pierce) 
Steam and Hot Water Heating 
| Plumbing, 
Special attention given to Testing of Plumbing and Drainage, 
SN All Work Personally Attended to. Fstimates Cheerfully Given | 
TELEPHONE 65 
4 Can be reached at any hour of night by telephone in case of water leaks or any emergency, 
West Street =< Beverly Farne 
PIERCE } 
Ds ra VASO VA aS VASE VA VA Seat ramon Comoe 
Reginald Foster of Coolidge’s Point 
sailed ‘Tuesday week for Europe to join 
Mrs. Foster who has been abroad for 
some time. 
It is reported that a family by the 
name of Nichols will occupy the Henry 
W. Cunningham cottage at West Man- 
chester this season. 
Col. Franklin Haven Dead. 
Col. Franklin Haven, a well knowm 
summer resident of Beverly Farms died 
suddenly at his home, 35 Beacon street, 
Boston, Tuesday night, of heart failure. 
Col. Haven was president of the Mer- 
chants’ National Bank Boston, and of 
the Boston Clearing House Association, 
and was regarded as one of the most in- 
dustrious and conservative of the city’s 
financiers. He was born in Boston, 
Oct. 11, 1836, son of the late Franklin 
and S. A. (Curtis) Haven. He was 
graduated from Harvard in the class of 
1857. In 1859 he was admitted to the 
bar in Iowa and two years later in Massa- 
Brooches 
Chains, Fobs 
Cut Glass 
Toilet Sets 
& a % 
chusetts. 
He served in the civil war as captain 
and aide-de-camp on the staff of Maj.- 
Gen. McDowell from 1862 to 1865, 
when he was made lieutenant-colonel 
of the 2d California cavalry. 
Col. Haven was one of the most loyal 
North Shore residents. In fact his family 
was one of the first to be attracted by the 
charms of the Beverly Farms. shore. 
‘The Haven estate is one of the largest 
on the whole shore, comprising some 80 
acres, 
West Beach. The estate extends from 
the beach to the railroad station. 
Col. 
Somerset, Union and St. 
of Boston, 
Botolph clubs 
the Essex County club at 
Manchester, the Country club at Brook- — 
line, the Harvard club of New York, 
the Massachusetts 
nine acres of which ‘fronts on 
Haven was a member of the — 
Military Historical © 
Society and the Boston Society of Natu- — 
ral History. He leaves a widow, 
one — 
brother, Edward Haven, and three sis- — 
ters, Miss Haven, Mrs. Waldo O. Ross 
and Mrs. John Pierpont. 
WEDDING JEWELRY sam. 
You do the choosing. 
Kodaks 
Opera Glasses 
Fountain Pens 
. Bric-a-brac i 
JOHN B. HILL & SON, JEWELERS 
Beverly, Mass. 
ee ate a ew 
