16 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Green Gables,:at Magnolia, which has had a very suc- 
cessful season, under the management of the Women’s 
Edueational and Industrial Union, will remain open 
later than last year and reservations are being made for 
1911. ) 
Charles Towne of New York, editor and poet, is the 
house guest. of Mrs. F. K. Stearns on the Shore road, 
Magnolia. Mr. Stearns is expected about the middle of 
September. He is now in Paris. 
Harold J. Parsons, the archeologist, who has been the 
cuest of the Roger Noble Burnhams and others on the 
North Shore, sailed for Rome, Italy, last week. His. 
mother, Mrs. Woodbury Parsons of Commonwealth ave., 
Boston, sails on October 1 with the Burnhams for Na- 
‘ples. Mrs. Marshall Johnston of Georgia and her party 
are sailing also for a winter in Italy. 
Mr. and Mrs..S, W. Travers have returned to their 
Richmond home, after a second summer at Magnolia. 
Mr. Travers is treasurer of the Virginia-Carolina Chemi- 
eal Company. 
Miss ‘Tapley of Boston gave a luncheon last week at 
Green Gables, Magnolia. Covers were laid for fifteen. 
An engagement of much North Shore interest, par- 
ticularly to the Boston and Harvard contingent, is that 
of Miss Katherine Warren, second daughter of Mrs. 
Samuel Dennis Warren of Boston and Dedham, and 
John Eliott Thayer, jr., of Boston and Lancaster. Miss 
Warren’s mother was Miss Bayard, daughter of the 
late Thomas F. Bayard, who was ambassador to Great 
Britain during the Cleveland administration. Mr. 
Thayer, who is a nephew of Bayard Thayer, is a cousin 
t» the Countess Moltke (Cornelia Thayer). 
The HEATH CoO. 
of 9 East 4ist St.. New York 
and The Berkeley Bldg., Boston 
Announces to their North Shore Customers 
that as usual they are at 
27 CENTRAL ST., 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
Where they are displaying 
LATEST NOVELTIES IN 
LAMP AND CANDLE SHADES 
and 
~ DECORATIVE HOUSE FURNISHINGS 
IN EXCLUSIVE: DESIGNS 
IPSWICH. 
Mrs. A. Lithgow Devens of Boston and Beverly Farms 
spent a few days late last week with the Bayard Tuck- 
ermans of New York and Ipswich. 
The Misses C. F. and Mary Bates of Salem and Ips- 
wich, who have a charming estate here, had a large 
house party of friends during Pageant week. They are 
highly esteemed in Ipswich for their interest in the 
town and their generosity and philanthropic deeds. 
The Ipswich Pageant closed last Saturday afternoon 
and proved a great success from an artistic and financial 
standpoint and the series of colonial pictures shown 
were beautiful in their out-door setting. Prominent 
summer residents assumed roles, particularly the mem- 
bers of the Appleton family. Julia Appleton appeared 
in Seene I., as Lady of the Manor; Jimmy Appleton as a 
village child; Madeline Appleton appeared as First, 
Squaw in Scene II.,; The Agawam Indians, and in Scene 
V., King Phillip’s War; Randolph Appleton appeared 
as Major Whipple and Capt. Samuel Appleton’s role 
was.assumed by James Appleton. James W. Appleton 
appeared as the clerk in the town meeting and Miss 
Alice Appleton asumed the role of the bride and Francis 
Wood, a summer resident from Boston, served as the 
groom. 
Miss Searle, daughter of C. P. Searle, was Mrs. Na- 
thaniel Treadwell in the last scene of the Pageant, the 
Tea Party. The etchings and souvenirs sold at the 
Pageant were the work of another summer resident, 
Mrs. J. H. Wright of Boston. 
The nuptials of Miss Madeline Appleton of New York 
and Ipswich and Vincent Kidder of Chicago will be 
quietly solemnized at the Ascension Memorial Episcopal 
Hodgson, Kennard & Co. 
Incorporated 
25 STATE STREET, BOSTON, MASS. 
Diamond Cutters 
Jewelers and Silversmiths 
The Oceanside, Magnolia 
Mr. ARTHUR KENNARD, Resident Partner 
RARE GEMS ARTISTICALLY MOUNTED 
PEARLS, PEARL NECKLACES 
PEARL NECKLACES ENLARGED 
JEWELRY AND NOVELTIES 
AN UNUSUAL COLLECTION 
INSPECTION INVITED | 
