SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Denegre 
left West Manchester Wednesday 
for a short trip to New York, by 
auto. : 
_ Miss Elizabeth W. Perkins closed 
her estate on West Beach, Beverly 
Farms, yesterday. By her return to 
Boston, one of its artistic and phi- 
lanthropie residents of social prom- 
inence will be welcomed. 
D. Herbert Hosteter and family 
are leaving Beverly on Tuesday next 
for their Pittsburg home. 
F. L. Higginson and family are 
giving up the pleasures and attrac- 
tions of their Pride’s estate next 
Wednesday. Thursday evening they 
were at home for another of their 
delightful dinner parties. There 
were covers for six. 
The Hale street summer residence 
at Beverly of James H. Procter will 
welcome a dinner company of ten 
tomorrow evening. : 
The members of the German lega- 
tion, who have made Manchester 
their summer headquarters, planned 
to remove to Washington Thursday 
of this week. 
The secretary of the Brazilian le- 
gation, R. De Lima E. Silva, will re- 
‘main in Manchester until the middle 
of November as a little son arrived 
~ in his household last Sunday, which | 
will cause a delay in his plans for 
departure to Washington. 
Thomas Taylor, jr., and family 
plan to leave Manchester for their 
winter home in South Carolina next 
Monday. 
Mrs. Levi Z. Leiter closed her Bev- 
erly Cove cottage last Sunday and 
has returned to her winter residence, 
Dupont Cirele, Washington. Mrs. 
Leiter is an early comer and Jate 
stayer on the North Shore. She in- 
tends to open her new estate at Bev- 
erly Farms next May to reside until 
Nov. 1. During the autumn the large 
fruit and vegetable houses of glass, 
will be erected. 
Mrs. George Wigglesworth and 
daughter, Mrs. Chase of Boston, were 
in Manchester Monday. This was 
the first visit of Mrs. Wigglesworth 
to her summer estate since her re- 
turn from Europe. 
B. F. KEITH’S THEATRE. 
With at least three. productions in 
the list of entertainers of world-wide 
reputation, the bill at B. F. Keith’s 
theatre next week promises. to, break 
~ all records. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
11 
Telephone Talks 
Keep in touch with the world 
—and see to it that the world 
may keep in touch with you. 
seme regard for the equities should keep them from in- 
fringing by approaching to themselves more telephone 
service than can be exacted as their fair share of the 
capacity of that line. 
is in use the entire main line is closed to traffic, not 
merely to the other spur tracks on the line, but also to 
incoming trains consigned to any part of the line. 
Ordinary regard for the principle of the Golden 
Rule will do more to avert party line difficulties than 
al] the rules any telephone company may promulgate. 
NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE 
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY. 
Party-Liners 
And the Golden Rule 
Party line telephone subscribers virtually are co- 
—_—_——_————— 
tenants. They jointly pay for a single telephone line. 
If they were co-tenants of a building they would be 
careful not to infringe upon the rights of others. That 
Lengthy conversations on unimportant matters, the 
prattling intercourse of children, phonograph concerts, 
and the lke—these sometimes congest party lines and 
give cause for protest from other tenants in common. 
A party line telephone has been likened to a spur 
track on a main line of railroad. 
portant qualification—when the telephone spur track 
But there is this im- 
Among the productions 
will be included Jesse Lasky’s big 
musical comedy called ‘‘The Photo 
Shop,’’? with a large company of 
comedians and the splendid chorus 
wearing beautiful gowns; another 
will be Mrs. Gardner Crane and her 
company of comedians, in the com- 
edy called ‘‘The Little Sunbeam,’’ 
which is without question one of the 
greatest novelties of the year. The 
scene shows the interior of a Pull- 
man sleeping car during the early 
morning, when all the passengers are 
turning out, and there are all kinds 
of difficulties in which the conductor 
and porter take a leading part. 
There is a plot running through the 
piece and an endless amount of eom- 
edy. This week will also mark the 
first vaudeville appearance of Floe- 
ence Noyes and Walter Stiles. two 
well-known Bostonians, who have for 
some time been prominent in fash- 
lonable drawing rooms doing classic 
dances, 
