36 
CAPE ANN RESORTS 
Mrs. Henrietta M. Gaunt of New 
York City has arrived at Gaunt 
Manor, her attractive estate at Land’s 
End, Rockport. 
Charles R. Lamb and family of 
Cambridge have opened their sum- 
mer home on _ Phillips avenue, 
Pigeon Cove, for the season. 
Mrs. Ira Mac Nutt of Bethlehem, 
Pa., accompanied by her sisters, Mrs. 
S. B. Howe and Miss Elizabeth 
Barry have arrived at the Mac- 
Nutt estate, Adams road, Annisquam, 
for the summer. Col. Mac Nutt will 
spend the summer abroad. 
Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Babbitt have 
vacated their apartments at The Tu- 
dor, Boston, and opened ‘Pineledge,”’ 
their summer home at Land’s End, 
Rockport. 
GLOUCESTER. 
Miss Elizabeth Betts, daughter of 
M. D. Betts, has returned from New 
Hampshire and has accepted a posi- 
tion with the Palace of Sweets. 
SALEM Caper BANb’s Pop CONCERTS. 
The last in a series of three Pop 
Concerts by the Salem Cadet Band, 
Jean Missud, conductor, was given 
last Saturday afternoon in the Salem 
Armory. The concerts have been 
given under the auspices of the Sec- 
ond Corps of Cadets, M. V.M., and 
have drawn audiences which _ have 
filled the big building. 
As a North Shore musical organ- 
ization of note, the band takes a front 
rank place and is in great demand 
particularly in the summer at various 
high class functions, including the 
Marblehead yacht clubs, etc. 
Last Saturday’s program was sug- 
gestive of the musical treats which 
have been offered, both from _ the 
works of the great masters and the 
creators of popular music. Hearty 
applause and frequent encores were 
accorded the numbers offered. . The 
full program was as follows :— 
Marchi (ihetBlordi 7. sis sentences Zickel 
Grand Selection —‘‘Carmen’’...... Bizet 
Diet, tor iCornetsier.. aac. nee scene Selected 
Messrs. Bernier and Leitsinger .... 
Seene from ‘‘Les Huguenots’’ .Meyerbeer 
(The Blessing of the Daggers) 
Melodies from ‘‘Bright Eyes’’ ...Hochna 
Tenor Solo— Serenade: ‘‘Come Love, to 
M672 cd. Jn Pele Rit gene REM ed oe rairale (Original) 
Frederick 8. Hall 
f Ballet Hoy pile: mtcaeee ees cimees Luigini 
I—Allegro non troppo 
Ii—Allegretto 
IJI—Andante Sostenuto 
IV—Andante and Allegro 
Solo for Trombone—‘‘ Air Varie’’ 
Harlow 
Frank Glassman 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SAN FRANCISCO 1915 
Announcement made of free trip to the 
Panama-Pacific 
ORD has been received from SuNSET, 
International 
Exposition 
the Magazine of the 
Pacific and the Far West, of the organization of the Sunset 
Panama-Pacific Club. The Club offers a four weeks’ trip to the Ex- 
position to be held in San Francisco in 1915, including railway fare, 
Pullman, diner, hotel accommodations, admissions to the fair, side 
trips to points of interest, all in return for a little time each week to 
be devoted to the work of the Magazine. 
The exposition is to be held to commemorate the completion of 
the Panama Canal, connecting the Pacific and Atlantic. 
From all 
indications it will be by far the greatest World’s Fair ever held. 
The Magazine has issued a very attractive booklet descriptive of 
the trip, and giving further particulars, which will be sent on appli- 
cation. 
The membership is very limited and it is not likely that more 
than one or two applications will be accepted from this vicinity. 
Request for particulars should be sent to 
SUNSET PANAMA-PACIFIC CLUB 
317 BatTery STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 
Ce 
Valse from—‘‘Les Millions d’Arlequin’’ 
- Drigo 
March from—‘‘Tannhauser’’ ....Wagnec 
‘he concerts have proved a very 
popular spring attraction and have 
drawn crowds of music lovers to Sa- 
lem from all points of the North 
Shore. 
REAL ESTATE. 
The nine-roomed cottage opposite 
the summer capitol on Corning 
street, Montserrat, is being remod- 
elled for executive offices to be in 
charge of the President’s new sec- 
retary, Charles E: Hilles. The: se- 
cret service men will also have quar- 
ters in the building which is being 
wired for telephone, telegraph and 
private signal use. New plumbing 
and bathrooms are being added. .The 
barn in the rear of this cottage is be- 
ing remodelled to accommodate the 
twelve automobiles in the President’s 
livery. 
An artesian well to be driven 200 
feet is) being’ drilled on? the, F. Ty. 
Higginson estate at Pride’s. Provi- 
dence contractors are doing the work. 
Connolly Bros., of Beverly Farms, 
have the contract for the exterior im- 
provements to the Wm. M. Wood 
’ summer home at Pride’s. 
My good blade carves the casques of 
men, 
My tough lance thrusteth sure, 
My strength is as the strength of ten 
Because my heart is pure. 
—Tennyson. 
A textile manufacturer, who is 
much respected by his employees on 
acount of a genial nature and his dis- 
position to be fair, delights in tell- 
ing of an incident that occurred sev- 
eral years ago at a “supper” they 
gave him on his return from a trip to 
Europe. 
After the best eatables and drink- 
ables were enjoyed, the manufacturer 
told of his trip to the Emerald Isle. 
He paused when he mentioned the 
city of Cork, and asked Peter Costi- 
gan, one of the diners, “Were you 
ever-in Cork?” 
“No, sir,” was the quick answer. 
“Well, well,” said the manufac- 
turer, “you an Irishman and you were 
never in the city of Cork.” 
This remark stirred up the wit in 
Costigan, who was liked among the 
mill workers because of his repartee, 
and then came the quick response: 
“Sure [ was never in Cork, sir, but 
I have been at many a pulling of it 
and this one is the best.”—Philadel- 
phia Telegraph. 
NE Sethe 
The American wife was handing 
her ultimatum to her “busted” count. 
“Rather than live on poor, dear pa, 
we will sell your ancestral halls and 
live in a Harlem flat,” she flung at 
him defiantly. 
“Atlas!” he groaned, “eet is impos- 
sible. In a Harlem flat are no closets 
—and where—where—would we keep 
ze family skeletons?” 
Crushed by the inevitable, she 
stared dully into the dying embesr— 
Judge’s Library. 
