SOCIETY NOTES 
““The College Hero’’ will begin its 
week’s run at the St. James’ theatre, 
Boston, November 11. Many prom- 
inent North Shore matrons are in- 
terested in this musical extravaganza 
to be given by the Animal Rescue 
League, and among the Harvard 
men who will take part is Evans 
Spaulding, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fran- 
eis R. Spaulding of Boston and West 
Manchester. 
°o & 
Mr. and Mrs. F. Blackwood Fay 
and two daughters who have been 
spending the season at the Kimball 
cottage, Manchester, have returned 
to Boston for the winter. 
Miss Aline Tarbell 
Araduate N. E. Conservatory of Music 
Piano Teacher 
may be made for 
Saturdays by addressing 
MISS ALINE TARBELL 
5 North Street Manchester, Mass. 
Telephone 9-4 
Reterences: Wallace Goodrich; F. Addison 
Porter, Supt. Normal Department N. E. 
Conservatory of Music. 
Appointments 
HOUSE OF SEVEN GABLES, 1669 
Scene of Hawthorne’s Roa 
Open to visitors daily. Six rooms 
and secret Staircase are shown 
Fee 25c. including garden and 
counting house. 
Admission to Hepzibah’s Shop, Free 
Quaint and attractive articles on sale. 
Tea served in the garden. 
Hathaway House (1683) in the same 
grounds. 
54 Turner St., Salem 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Miss Margery Lee is another of 
the North Shore young girls, who 
will make her debut into Boston so- 
ciety this winter. Her mother, Mrs. 
George Lee has made arrangements 
to give her a tea, to be followed by 
dancing, at the family’s Brookline 
home, Thursday, Nov. 14. The Lees 
are still at Beverly Farms. 
oR 9 
Mr. and Mrs. James Lowell Put- 
nam of Boston, who are so well 
known on the North Shore, are now 
at Hot Springs, Virginia, where they 
will be until the first of November, 
at least. Mr. and Mrs. Prescott 
Bigelow, Jr., of Brooklne, who have 
spent the past two months at Man- 
chester are congenial additions to 
the colony at Hot Springs, also, this 
fall. ‘‘Fox Hill Lodge,’’ the Bige- 
low summer home at Manchester 
was closed Monday and Mr. and 
Mrs. Prescott Bigelow with their 
daughter, Miss Elizabeth, returned 
to Boston. 
The many friends of Mr. and Mrs. 
Vaughn were glad to weleome them 
back to Pride’s Crossing after their 
sojourn abroad. They are with Mrs. 
Vaughn’s mother, Mrs. A. P. Loring 
now, but expect to move into their 
own house at the Farms in the near 
future to remain all winter. Mrs. 
Vaughn was Miss May Loring be- 
fore her marriage. 
Mr. and Mire Nathaniel Simpkins, 
Jr., (Olivia Thorndike) have con- 
cluded their season at Beverly 
Farms and are already settled at 
their apartment at the Royal, Beacon 
ae Boston. 
WOMOMUMONOVOROBOVOBVORBVOBVOBOBVOBOS BWORBOBWOBWOBOBVOBVOBVOB’OWON BONS 
8 s 
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§ Antiques, Curios ard Works of Art § 
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g Bureaus, tables, chairs, bigh-boys desks. Portrait of two children 2 
% painted at Salem in 1850, by Osgood. g 
g No coll ction of American portrait painters is comp'ete without an Osgood, and 2 
3 as I have never before known f one to be in the hands of a dealer, few are complete 3 
ex % 
S F.W.NICHOLS - _7812FederalSt. - SALEM,MASS §& 
% See at 67 North Street a 
Seto BOMOWOWO Os BWOWOM 4 SOS OS Os SOB OF 33 OSS 24 O85: 
Only thoroughly trained 
competent servants (male 
or female) supplied. Re- 
ferences personally and 
arefully investigated 
305 Fifth Ave., 
—— ae 
Registry Office 
Telephones 8822, 8823 Madison Square 
N. BE. Gor. Sist 6t. N. Y. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Francis I. Amory and his daugh- 
ter, Miss Mary Josephine Amory, are 
with the Dr Henry Sears family at 
Beverly Cove. Mr. Amory and his 
daughter returned the first of the 
month from a trip abroad and will 
remain with Dr. Sears until the 
Amory cottage at Beverly Cove is 
vacated by the W. B. Millers, whe 
are soon to return to Akron, Ohio, 
The Amorys will be at the Cove unti 
after the Christmas holidays, when 
they will go to their Boston house 
for the remainder of the winter. 
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Miss Laura Maree of Washing. | 
ton, whose engagement to J. F. C 
tis of Boston and Manchester has 
recently been announced, has con- 
cluded her visit with Mr. Curtis’ 
mother, Mrs. Greely S. Curtis a: 
Manchester-by-the-Sea and is now 
the guest of her aunt, Mrs. James 
Cunningham Bishop, of New York 
who is doing many pleasant things 
for Miss Mera 
3 0 
Mr. and ar Hay E. Russell 
gave a small informal dance at their 
home at Manchester last Friday ev- 
ening in honor of their neice Migs 
Margaret Russell, the attract 
daughter of the late Governor Wil- | 
liam Russell. She had been at Lon 
don with her mother, Mrs. Michael 
Fister, and has returned to Boston 
to be one of the season’s buds. 
O08 °O 
Miss Elizabeth Sears, the daugh- 
ter of Herbert M. Sears, is to sail for 
Paris soon to procure her trousseau 
for her wedding to Bayard Warren, 
which will take place in the early 
spring. Miss Sears is a prominent 
member of the Vincent club and is 
listed as one of the soloists at the 
fair, for which club plans are already 
under way. She played the leading 
role in ‘‘Miladi from Dublin’’ last 
spring. 
> ¢% % 
Mrs. Clarence Moore of Pride’s 
Crossing is spending a month at Hot 
Springs, Virginia, before going to 
Washington. 
Special Attention Given 
to Out-of-Town Orders. |] 
