NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Horse Show 
The twelfth annual open-air horse 
show at the Myopia Hunt club will be 
held on Labor day, and as usual will 
attract a large number of society 
people from all along the North 
Shore. This year there will be some 
changes in the method of classifying 
the horses and the polo ponies will be 
left out on account of the polo games 
being held that same week at Ded- 
ham. The class for four-in-hand will 
also be omitted. Inasmuch as Judge 
Moore is to be one of the judges at 
the Newport show which opens on 
the same day, his horses will not be 
entered. 
Entries closed Wednesday night 
with an unusually large list of com- ‘ 
petitors. All the classes are well 
filled and this is particularly true of 
the hunters. The saddle and harness 
classes are also well filled and some 
keen rivalry is anticipated for the pos- 
session of the coveted blues. 
Among the new entrants’ this year 
is Mrs. Larz Anderson of Brookline, 
who has entered a fine string of har- 
ness horses in her own name. Among 
the other entrants for the show are 
the George S. Mandells, Oliver Ames, 
Léonard D7. Ahls;sithe .Gharies FG, 
Ricess) James oll OC rh wean 
Wentz, Clarence Moore, Robert S. 
Bradley and B. W. Palmer. 
There will be both morning and 
afternoon sessions, the former com- 
mencing at 11 and the latter at 2.30. 
George Warren’ of the South 
Cheshire hunt, England, A. E. 
Oglieve of the Montreal hunt and 
James W. Appleton of the Myopia 
hunt club will judge in the hunting 
classes. Francis Peabody, jr., Arthur 
Steadman and a third judge yet to 
be named, will make the awards in the 
harness and saddle classes. 
Also at 
Newport 
TOWELS BLANKETS AND SILH COSEYS 
‘CENTRE PIECES AND DOYLIES 
EMBROIDERED SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES 
SHEER EMBROIDERED BED SPREADS 
Dlace your orders in our SUMMER SHOP, where shopping is cool and comfortable 
and we will deliver same to your city address, when you desire them 
WILLIAM CARR 
OF NEW 
YORK 
oe ee) eee AS So) ONT 
High Street, Beverly Farms 
WHERE HE HAS 
FOR HIRE OR FOR SALE 
SOME HIGH-CLASS PONIES, SADDLE HACKS, 
JUMPERS, ETC. 
Returned to Manchester Man After 
Traveling Hundreds of Miles 
On April 2, when four days out 
from the other side, W. W. Harding, 
who went to Europe in charge of 
W. D. Denegre’s touring car, threw 
overboard a sealed bottle containing a 
note. To his surprise a few days 
ago Mr. Harding received a letter 
from France, in which was enclosed 
his note. 
It appears that on the trip across a 
club was organized to which was given 
the name ‘‘Deacon’s Corner club.” 
The members of the club are Dr. B. 
O. Schulte of Louisville, Ky.; Ernest 
Wagner, Rock Island, Ill., Hugo von 
Pulver, Chicago; O. J. Piehler, Boston 
Drage eiiyde.. san,-Prancisco’: Dr: 
Wilerany, Domprobs, Germany; Dr. 
Spehr Ershischoff, Pforbheim, Ger- 
many ; Dr. P. P. Mason, Chicago ; W. 
W. Adams, New York, and W. W. 
Harding of Manchester. “Duke” 
Mason is a son of the American con- 
Grande Maison de Blanc 
308 fifth Avenue, - — - 
SPECIAL DISPLAY 
, Posey Bee 
FINE TABLE ‘LINEN 
Pew Gin 
in our own exclusive designs 
New York 
Che Colonnade, Magnolia 
sul at Paris. One of the rules of 
the club was that none of its members 
should appear in evening dress for 
dinner on the way across. At the 
captain’s dinner, however, Dr. Mason 
violated the rule and in consequence 
he had to pay the penalty by setting 
up a champagne dinner for the rest of 
the club. In one of the empty bot- 
tles Mr. Harding placed the following 
note ‘‘Dedicated to the treat by 
“Duke”? Mason to the Deacon’s Cor- 
ner club, April 2, 1907, on board 
Patricia. If found address W. W. 
Harding, Manchester, Mass.” 
The steamer was four days’ sail 
from Europe when this was thrown 
overboard. Thus it is with much sur- 
prise that the bottle and its contents 
ever drifted so far and should again 
find its way back to the sender on 
this side of the Atlantic. The bottle 
was picked up on the beach by a 
woman in a little village six miles 
from Bologne. 
Also at 
Bar PRarbor 
