NORTH SHORE BREEZE 9 
e53E. T. SLATTERY CO. <ee 
BOSTON 
Call attention to their Exhibit at their Branch Shop 
Sere THA HOUSE 
MAGNOLIA 
sae yar dd Shy 
ste steate a 
Hand Embroidered Linen Dresses 
Tailor-made Linen Suits 
Silk Shirt Waist Gowns 
with Long Coats 
and Walking Skirts 
Millinery and Neckwear 
Ruber Lined Auto Coats 
BEVERLY. 
Councilman Alfred E. Lunt is at 
Chicago where he has been called to 
manage the college campaign work for 
the Republican National committee. 
The position is an important one. 
Mr. Lunt’s work will be largely of an 
executive nature, in the line of organ- 
izing the different college clubs for 
the great presidential campaign in the 
fall. Mr. Lunt’s headquarters will be 
in the Auditorium in Chicago. 
Miss Effie Lefavour, who has been 
spending the summer at Groton, is 
entertaining there Miss Nettie C. 
Morgan. 
Mrs. H. B. Choate and Mrs. Han- 
nah Stickney are enjoying the moun- 
tain air at North Conway, N.H. 
Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Dodge are at 
Martha’s Vineyard for a short stay. 
They left Beverly Tuesday. 
Charles W. Adams of Dane street 
is again at his home, after five years’ 
absence in the west and southwest, 
where he has been engaged in govern- 
mental and railroad work. 
The outing of the Beverly Republi- 
can club has been postponed indefi- 
nitely. The announcement of the 
postponement is the cause of general 
regret among the Republicans of the 
North Shore, many of whom by invi- 
tation of the club members had 
planned to be present. Senator Lodge 
was to have been present, and many 
were eagerly anticipating hearing him 
speak at the outing. 
One of the early fall weddings to 
take place in Beverly is that of Miss 
Clara Putnam Smith to Charles F. 
Broughton, which is announced for 
the evening of September 12, at the 
Dane street church. 
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Wallis and 
Mrs. Osro Field leave Beverly today 
for San Francisco, where they will 
attend the national conclave of 
Knights pha ues 
End of Monohansett. 
The famous old Monohansett, Grant’s old 
despatch boat, now lies a heap of ashes on 
Misery island. Sunday the wreckers, who 
had been stripping her, set fire to the old 
and battered hulk and before nightfall there 
remained only a few ashes, the engines and 
the old boilers to mark the spot where she 
had gone ashore. 
The Monohansett went ashore on the 
afternoon of August 3,in a heavy fog on 
Misery Island. Her back broke with the 
receding tide, and yesterday was the end. 
During the day large numbers of pleasure 
parties sailed out around the island to 
witness the spectacle. 
H. M. St. Clair & Co. 
STAIR BUILDERS and 
CABINET MAKERS. 
53 Bow Street, Cor. Rantoul Street, 
BEVERLY: 
Telephone Connection 
