4 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
OE 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The annual Vincent club fair was 
held at the Copley-Plaza Tuesday af- 
ternoon and was a brilliant success. 
luncheon and afternoon tea were 
served and a delightful concert was 
given. Miss Margaret Codman was 
head waitress and Mrs. E. H. Brad- 
ford gave several clever monologues 
at the concert. Many North Shore 
women, handsomely gowned, were 
seen at the tables. Mrs. Philip Sears 
of Boston and Pride’s Crossing pre- 
. sided at the baby table with Mrs. J. 
M. Hallowell, Mrs. George C. Lee, 
Jr., and Miss Rosamond Gibson as 
her assistants. The household table 
was in charge of Mrs. John S. Ames, 
assisted by Mrs. J. Dudley Clark, 
Mrs. J. Lewis Bremer and Miss Mar- 
iam Fenno. The candy table was un- 
der the management of Miss Elise 
Pollard with Miss Rose Saltonstall 
and Miss Sallie Rackermann as aids. 
At the cake table, in charge of Miss 
Margaret Stackpole, were Mrs. Sam- 
uel D. Warren, Jr., and Miss Adelaide 
Jackson. Miss Alice Thorndike at 
the toy booth was aided by Miss Mary 
Pierce, Miss Julia Shepley and Miss 
Barbara Burr. Mrs. E. C. Wheeler, 
Jr., who was in charge of the fancy 
table, had with her Mrs. Frank Bemis, 
Miss Elaner Allen, Mrs. Robert Lee- 
son, Miss Dorothy Ball, Miss Edith 
Fitz and Miss Mildred Thayer. The 
“cash girls’ were under Mrs. Sam- 
uel Cabot, Jr., and included Miss Vio- 
let Shepley, Miss Nora Saltonstall, 
Mrs. John Swift, Jr., Mrs. William 
Bramhall, Miss Elinor Lawrence, 
Miss Polly Hemertway, Miss Char- 
lotte Hunnewell, Miss Elsie Burr, 
Miss Olivia Ames, Miss Josephine 
Rantoul, Miss Lucy Aspinwall, Miss 
Margery Prescott, Miss Helen Bul- 
lard, Miss Elizabeth Parker, Miss 
Ruth Harrington, Miss Mary Hun- 
newell and Mrs. Francis A. Harding. 
The ushers at the concert were very 
attractvie in their white gowns and 
ribbons of purple and yellow, the club 
colors. Miss Elizabeth Gray was 
head usher and was assisted by Mrs. 
Richard S. Lovering, Miss Barbara 
Miss Aline Tarbell 
Mraduate N. E. Conservatory of Music 
Piano Teacher 
Appointments may be made for 
Saturdays by addressing 
MISS ALINE TARBELL 
5 North Street Manchester, Mass. 
Telephone 9-4 
References: 
Wallace Goodrich; F. Addison Porter, 
Supt. Normal Department N. E. 
Conservatory of Music. 
Burr, Mrs. John E. Thayer, Jr., Miss 
Margaret Stackpole, Miss Clara 
Shattuck, Miss Frances Saltonstall, 
Miss Mary Copley Amory and Miss 
Katherine Amory. 
Miss Josephine Rantoul was hostess 
for the first meeting of the Sewing 
Circle Wednesday, at her home in 
Boston. 
Houiis Street THEATRE, 
It is the concensus of opinion among 
the Boston critics that Charles Cherry 
in the C. Haddon Chamber’s comedy, 
which goes into its third and last 
week atthe Hollis Street ‘Theatre 
next Monday night, is one of the few 
plays which Boston has seen this sea- 
son that is really worth while. The 
theme is not anew one but Mr. 
Chambers has presented it from a 
view-point so new, that in the playing 
it becomes a page from life.. In ad- 
dition to telling a story of absorbing 
interest Mr, Chambers has introduced 
into the action of the play a number 
of types, British ones, which have 
been drawn with the same fidelity to 
nature that Charles Dickens used to 
limn them is his novels. ‘“Passers- 
By” is rich in its appeal to human 
sentiment and it is cheerful and uplift- 
ing without a moment of depression. 
It is worth trying for any complaint 
you may have against yourself, for it 
is humanity and cheerfulness drama- 
tized for the particular good of those 
~who are weary of the sorid things of 
the theatre. It will probably be a 
very long time before there is present- 
ed a comedy that is more worthy of 
the support of the theatre-goers or 
one that is more novel or interesting. 
“Passers-By” is one of the big suc- 
cesses of the year. ‘he usual mati- 
nees will be given on Wednesday and 
on Saturday. 
Briggs—It’s too bad about Winkle 
and the girl he is engaged to. Neither 
of them is good enough for the other. 
Griggs—What makes you think 
that ? 
“Well, P’ve been talking the matter 
over with both families.” 
S 
Nance O'Neil in Her Greatest Success “Magda,” at Empire 
Theatre, 
Salem, Thursday Evening, December 12, 
