eS tes, 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
ams 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA. 
The Pierre Jays, who have been 
occupying the small Higginson cot- 
tage on the Beverly Farms road this 
summer removed to Boston Wednes- 
day. 
Monday the W. J. Boardmans and 
the George P. Fields closed their 
house and left for their winter houses 
in Washlngton and Boston respect- 
ively. 
Mr. and Mrs. Eben D. Jordan 
started last Saturday for Chicago to 
attend the horse show there. 
The engagement is announced of 
Miss Caroline Hemenway, daughter 
of Mrs. Charles P. Hemenway, who 
has a summer place here, and Charles 
Wilson Taintor. 
The Robert C. Winthrops and the 
Charles E. Cottings have closed their 
houses this week and returned to Bos- 
ton. 
The Walter J. Mitchells will re- 
main at their Cove house this year till 
after Christmas, when they will go to 
Washington for the winter. Week 
after next Mrs. Mitchell and Miss 
Naneen Mitchell will go to New York 
for a short visit. 
Miss Naneen Mitchell, by the way, 
will be one of the debutantes of the 
coming season in Washington. She 
has been cutting quite a figure in all 
the smart events of the summer on the 
North Shore in which the younger 
people entered and is one of the most 
popular of the younger set here. She 
has just returned from a delightful 
visit with friends at Hot Springs, Va., 
and St. Louis. 
One of the smartest events of the 
week in Washington society was the 
wedding Wednesday of Ronald Ly- 
man and Miss Elizabeth Van Court- 
land Parker. The groom is a son of 
Arthur T. Lyman, who spent part of 
the summer here in the J. R. Coolidge 
Jr’s. house on Smith’s Point. 
Mr. and Mrs. S. Parker Bremer 
started last Saturday morning, with 
Mr. Bremers mother, Mrs. J. L. 
Bremer, for St. Louis. Mrs. J. L. 
Bremer will not return to Manchester 
but her son will not close his house 
for some weeks to come. 
_ Mr.and Mrs. George Putnam, who 
left here in the middle of the summer, 
for a trip in Europe, arrived in Bos- 
ton last week. Their trip was short- 
ened somewhat because of the mar- 
riage of Mr. Putnam’s neice, Miss 
Amy Putnam, announced for next 
Monday. 
Miss Agnes Booth Schoeffel, who 
is so well known here, has recently 
been operated upon in New York for 
«cataracts on the eyes. 
BEVERLY FARMS. 
The chauffeur for J. Brook’s Fenno 
was held up by the city authorities 
for speeding on Broadway, Beverly, 
last week, and was fined $15. 
The friends of Thomas J. MacDon- 
ald, our genial plumber, will be pleased 
to hear he is convalescing at his Hale 
street home. 
The torchlight parade last night 
brought out quite an enthusiastic 
crowd of people. The Tars proved 
themselves royal entertainers. 
The Grand Charity entertainment 
and sociable in Neighbor’s Hall last 
night was a big sucess. Many well 
known artists were on the program. 
Misery Island Sold. 
To satisfy the claims of the mort- 
gage bondholders Misery Island was 
sold at auction Wednesday afternoon, 
three trustees appointed by the bond- 
holders bidding it in for the latter. 
The island was bought several years 
ago by a syndicate of Boston men, 
and $65,000 was spent in improving 
the place. The grounds were graded, 
golf links made, tennis courts con- 
structed, a club house built and every- 
thing that goes with making the spot 
a cozy one for men of money. After 
a year or two the corporation went to 
pieces, and the island was put up at 
auction by demand of the mortgage 
holders. It is not decided yet what 
will be done with the island. 
Band Concert Tonight. 
As the result of a canvass made 
along Cabot street Wednesday after- 
noon, over thirty merchants placed 
their names on a subscription list 
favoring a band concert in Beverly 
so that this evening from 7.30 to 9.30 
Beverly shoppers will be provided 
with a good musical program while 
about their shopping. The Beverly 
Cadet band will furnish the music. 
Novel Departure. 
A novel departure will be made this fall in 
the Young People’s quarterly conference of 
the Baptist churches of Manchester, Wen- 
ham and Beverly Farms. Instead of the 
usual form of holding a prayer meeting in 
the afternoon there will be this year an 
evening service also, at which there will be 
special music, and addresses by Dr, F. L. 
Wilkins of Gloucester and Rev. H. J. White 
of Beverly. The conference will be held on 
the third Thursday in December. A com- 
mittee is now at work making arrangements 
for the day. 
A Series of Sermons. 
Rey. Clarence Strong Pond begins a series 
of sermons at the Beverly Farms Baptist 
church tomorrow morning on “ What Christ 
Teaches.” The first in the series will be 
“God.” The other subjects in the order in 
which they come, will be ‘ Christ,” “‘ Holy 
Spirit,’ Man, “Sin, “Present eile, 
“Future Life.’ Tomorrow evening, in his 
series on “ David,” he will talk on ‘ David 
and Jonathan.” Next week his subject will 
be ‘' The Witch of Endor.” 
Work was started yesterday on 
concreting the sidewalk on Summer 
street extension in Manchester. 
Miss Rosalind Wheeler and the M. 
E. Andrewses have left Manchester 
this week for their winter homes. 
During the year just ending the 
Baptist church at Beverly Farms 
wiped out an old debt, and the society 
is now ina better financial condition 
than it has been for many years, with 
almost $400 in the treasury. 
Our genial Horace, ever enterpris- 
ing and up-to-date, has had his_black- 
smith shop wired, and the ‘‘juice”’ 
was turned on a few days ago. 
ARTHUR A. FORNESS 
Insurance and Real Estate 
NOTARY PUBLIC 
8 Endicott Building, BEVERLY 
WONSON'S SPA Ond LONGH ROOM, 
158 MAIN STREET, GLOUCESTER. 
Telephone 315-4, 
Cigars, Tobacco and Pipes 
At Wholesale and Retail. 
E. P. WONSON, -- - - 
Proprietor. 
(lon ll NIK 
FRUIT & CONFECTIONERY. 
ROWE’S BLOCK, 
(Old Post Office), 
Manchester, Mass. 
JONATHAN MAY, 
Real Estate and Insurance, 
NOTARY PUBLIC, 
Tel. Con. MAGNOLIA, 
JOHN B. ‘HILL & SON . .: JEWELERS: 
Repairing of Watches, Clock, Jewelry, etc., given particular attention. 
Dealer in Kodaks, Cameras and Photo Supplies. 
160 Cabot Street, 
Agents for the Eastman Kodak Co. 
BEVERLY. 
