Society Notes. 
T. Jefferson Coolidge, jr., and family 
moved down from Boston Thursday 
and are located at their beautiful new 
mansion at Manchester Cove for the 
season. Mr. Coolidge’s father and 
Miss Hetty Sargent, who have been 
spending a month or so in California, 
have just returned, and will be among 
the next to join the steadily increasing 
colony. ; 
Next Tuesday has been set as the 
day the Charles Heads are to move 
down from Boston. Their house has 
been opened during the week and 
everything is in readiness for their 
arrival. 
The latter part of next week Mr. 
and Mrs. S. Parker Bremer will move 
down from town permanently. Their 
beautiful yacht, the ‘ Velthra,’’ will 
be put in commission on the 19th — 
next Wednesday. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Daniels, Robert 
S. Bradley, the Misses Bradley, Mrs. 
George A. Goddard, J. Hurd Hutch- 
ins, George Lee, Gerard Bement and 
H. D. Chapin were among the Boston 
people who were noticed at Beverly- 
Farms during the week. 
Mrs. Sylvester Tower was in Man- 
chester, Thursday, and was at her 
house on Cobb avenue. 
W. L. Putnam and family are ex. 
pected the first of the coming week- 
Their house on Smith’s point, Man 
chester, was opened the past week 
and made ready for occupancy. 
Miss Margaret Winthrop returned 
-a few days ago from her trip to the 
Mediterranean and Southern Europe, 
and she is planning on a visit to Man- 
chester today. Within a week or two 
Miss Winthrop will bring her class of 
boys in St. Paul’s to the shore for a 
‘day’s outing, as is her custom, and 
of the things to make the trip an 
enjoyable one for the boys will be a 
baseball game with the Manchester 
boys. Miss Winthrop had a delight- 
ful trip abroad. The family probably 
will not move down from Boston till 
- June this year. 
Eben D. Jordan and his son, Robert 
Jordan, who is a Junior at Harvard, 
went over to New York the first of the 
week, and sailed from there Wednes- 
day on the Oceanic. They plan to 
meet Mrs. Jordan, Miss Dorothy and 
Miss Helen in Paris, where they will 
spend some time before going to the 
castle in Scotland for the late spring 
hunt and summer. 
Miss Maude Sturgis was down to 
her place at Manchester Cove Thurs- 
day making preparations for opening 
the house a little later. 
4 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
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< Soft April Showers 
eux and Bright Shining 
Rays 
of the early Spring sun tell us of the warm days that 
will shortly follow and must of necessity bring us 
face to face with warm weather’s needs. 
RANNEY BABIES’ 
REFRIGERATORS. VEHICLES. 
The hard wood Re- So broad is the range 
frigerator that is tenant- 
ed together so tightly 
that damp basements and 
hot kitchens have no in- 
fluence on the joints 
whatever. That is lined 
with refined galvanized 
steel, free from corrosion 
and tougher than zinc. 
With an all metal in- 
terior—not a piece of 
wood as big as a tooth- 
pick on the inside. 
Metal shelves that don’t 
break, and that slide and 
adjust. 
Spring hinges on the 
doors that keep them for- 
ever closed. 
Packed, a solid inch 
thick, with mineral wood 
that makes them feel in- 
side like a veritable ice- 
berg. 
Any size, from a small 
chest two feet long to 
the mammoth Grocers’ 
Refrigerators. 
All shown on one floor 
—brought here by the 
car-load and priced at 
car-load prices, which 
fact does not apply to 
any other line of Refrig- 
erators you'll see _here- 
abouts. We are the only 
car-load receivers in 
this whole country. 
This makes a_ differ- 
ence of about Io per cent. 
in the retail prices. 
Prove this by compari- 
son. You'll do as your 
neighbors before you 
have done. Buy a Ran- 
ney. 1500 now in use in 
our vicinity. 
From $3.75 to $45. 
that we can no longer 
confine the name to Go- 
Carts or Carriages, for 
now we have the English 
Coaches, the Pullman 
Sleepers, the fold-up-in- 
your-pocket affairs, mak- 
ing the variety so broad 
we must give the line 
more distinction; hence 
—Vehicles. 
This season’s_ babies 
are to be most beauti- 
fully cared for. Never 
was the scope of ideas so 
broad and never the 
value so strongly shown 
forth. 
The stately English 
Coach, with its grace 
fully sweeping sides, its 
neatly shaped hood and 
its snappy brass trim- 
mings, can be had _ this 
season, with the genuine 
strap-gear, for only 
$26.00. 
A Hood Top Carriage. 
with closely woven rat- 
tan sides, upholstered in 
corduroy, with heavy 
rubbers tires: only 
$23.50. 
A Pullman Sleeper, 
that is a combination of 
a Carriage and Go-Cart, 
with handsome lace par- 
asol, for $17.00. 
An adjustable Go-Cart 
of the full grown size, 
with close woven sides, 
a full round roll, uphol- 
stered in bedford cord, 
a good full cushion, lace 
covered, green lined par- 
asol, for only $10.00. 
. The , little 
from $2.75. 
for 
, Be sure and have a look at our CARPET and 
f\ DRAPERY Departments 
h span new things very reasonably priced. 
this Spring. Spick and 
Citus & Co. 
y 
fold-ups, WW 
W 
17 
