NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
19 
AT AUCTION! . 
ANTIQUE 
THE LARGEST COLLECTION OF 
FURNITOURE 
cep NRT a EB pt 
BRIC -A- BRAC, 
Which has taken over thirty years to get together by one of the best known Massachusetts 
Collectors, in Salem, will be sold at 156 Essex Street, at absolute Auction, commencing 
Monday, August 7th, at 10.30 a.m. and 2.30 p.m., 
D. R. MacAFEE, Sale Manager. 
And continuing for ONE WEEK. 
H. A. SEAVEY, Auctioneer. 
Society Notes 
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Leroy Edgar 
and son, Master William Edgar, are 
on from Dobb’s Ferry fora short visit 
with Mrs. Edgar’s father and mother, 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward King of New 
York, who are occupying the Blake 
cottage at West Manchester. 
Hon. T. Jefferson Coolidge of Man- 
chester is the last of the summer col- 
ony to succumb to the auto. He has 
just bought a new Pierce car. 
Mrs. John Bailey of New York is 
spending a few days at West Man- 
chester, guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. R. 
Tibbitts. 
Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Felton have 
with them at their University lane 
cottage Miss M. Felton of Hannaford, 
Conn. 
Practically the entire Russian em- 
bassy and attaches left on Sunday, 
either for New York to meet M. Witte, 
the Russian plenipotentiary, or for 
Portsmouth to their headquarters 
there. Mm. Hansen, Wilenkin and 
de Siebert, who have been stopping at 
the New Magnolia, have all departed, 
the first named for New York and the 
second for Portsmouth. M. de Sie- 
bert is at the embassy at Coolidge 
Point and is expected to remain there 
throughout the entire conference. M. 
Hansen may also be retained in Mag- 
nolia on his return from New York, in 
which case he will make his head- 
quarters again at the New Magnolia. 
The secretaries are greatly missed by 
the guests of the house, with whom 
they had become very well acquainted, 
and their early arrival is eagerly looked 
forward to. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Burlin- 
gane of New York registered at 
Brownland, in Manchester, the first 
of the week for August. 
Miss Lillian Mitchell is on from St. 
Louis, visiting her cousin, Miss Nan- 
neen Mitchell, at Manchester Cove. 
Mrs. O. W. Peabody of Milton is a 
guest of the T. K. Lothrops at West 
Manchester. 
No Clue to Thief. 
No reliable clue has yet been ob- 
tained by the Manchester police as to 
the identity of the man who boldly 
walked into the residence of William 
Hooper at West Manchester a week 
ago Thursday night, and left the house 
again with about $36 in cash, a gold 
watch and other jewelry, as was ex- 
clusively announced in last week’s 
BREEZE. 
It appears that a man walked into 
the residence of Mrs James T. Fields 
on Thunderbolt hill on the same day 
under similar circumstances, but in- 
stead of finding the way clear, he ran 
into a guest at the house. The fellow 
said he was looking for a relative and 
had walked right in. Another man, 
on the same day, was found walking 
into the Cochrane cottage on Cobb 
avenue, occupied by the Brewers. 
It is thought the man was the same 
in all these cases. The police look 
upon the thing as the work of an ex- 
perienced crook. 
Runs Away From Home. 
The Manchester police had a conun- 
drum on their hands, the first of the 
week, in the form of a young lad of 14 
named George Sullivan, who came 
into town on the 8.07 train Saturday 
night, The youngster claimed his 
father had died two years ago and his 
mother seven years ago; that he had 
since been living with a family in New 
Haven, Conn., named Tilday; that he 
came to Mass. two weeks ago to live 
with his aunt, Mrs. Sullivan, in Bos- 
ton, and that she put him on a train 
Saturday evening tor Manchester, 
where he was to be met by a rich 
uncle, William Sullivan, who owned a 
farm. He was a runaway from New 
Haven. His father came on Monday 
night after him. 
