18 N O R 
AUTOMOBILES TO RENT 
Tol 
qo Hee gitens 
By the Hour, Day or Week. Open Day or Night. 
Strictly First Class Cars and Careful Drivers. 
PiefekiP: HR: Git RAGE CO. 
Beverly, Mass. 
W. A. ROWE 
Telephone 60 
F. R. HARPER 
Agents for Premier and Overland Cars and White Commercial Trucks. 
Complete stock of Tires always on hand as well as all other Motor Car Accessories. 
SALEM 
NURSERIES 
(Branch of Highland Nurseries, 4,000 ft elevation in Carolina Mts. ) 
Beautiful Gardens and Home Grounds. 
The choicest Evergreens, Rhododendrons, 
Azaleas and Flowering 
Shrubs are always used in gardens laid out by us. 
Specimen stock that produces permanent results rather than LOW 
PRICES. 
Better do a little gardening well than a big garden poorly. 
Beautiful Catalogs, or call at Nursery on Marblehead Read, or office. 
Telephone Salem 820 
. e . 
ie ih 
LEWIS 
HARLAN P. KELSEY, Owner, 
287 Essex Street, 
SALEM, MASS. 
CLEANERS AND DYERS 
Fancy Fabrics and the most delicately 
made articles are cleaned by us without 
the least injury or the smallest risk. Our 
system is the latest and most infallable. 
Feathers, Laces, Embroideries, Curtains, 
Lingeries, Silks, Gloves, etc., if entrusted 
to us, are made to look as good as new 
again. You will be surprised at the re- 
sult of your first order and will always 
patronize us afterwards. TRY US. 
Lewis’ The Bay State Dye House, Cleaners and Dyers 
Delivery tem O4 Lafayette St., SALEM 
G. Willis Whipple & Company 
OPTIC PANES 
EXPERT WATCH and CLOCK REPAIRING 
FULL LINE OF SILVER and CUT GLASS 
290 Essex Street, 
YO Mz. Co Ay Bids: 
SALEM, MASS. 
3 THE BAY STATE DYE HOUSE 
Tel. 1017 
Bites sa Zr 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
Dinner parties continue to provide 
early autumn social intercourse on 
the North Shore and to extend the 
season most agreeably. Two of the 
largest dinners of the week were 
given on Sunday and Wednesday 
evenings by the George D. Wideners 
of Philadelphia, at West Manchester. 
Twenty guests were entertained on 
Sunday. Edward H. Winslow of 
North Beverly entertained fifty of 
his young friends at a dinner dance 
on Monday evening. Tuesday eve- 
ning Mr. and Mrs. Philip Dexter 
were at home to a dinner company 
of fourteen at their beautiful sum- 
mer residence at Manchester. Mrs. 
Henry W. Stephens of Detroit was 
also a dinner hostess on Tuesday at 
Pride’s. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Ames 
‘are giving a dinner party this eve- 
ning at Pride’s. 
o°o°09 
Mr. and Mrs. James Higginson of 
Chicago, concluded a visit with Mrs. 
Henry Pratt McKean at Pride’s 
Wednesday. They will sojourn in 
Pittsfield before going to their west- 
ern home. 
00909 
Walter Scott Fitz, formerly of 
Boston and Newton, was married 
Tuesday noon at Trinity Chureh in 
Seattle, Wash., to Charlotte De 
Wolfe Whittlesey, the daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Whittlesey 
of Seattle. The wedding ceremony 
was performed by Right Rev. Robert 
L. Paddock, D. D., and following the 
church service there was a reception, 
with a wedding breakfast, at the 
home of the bride’s parents. The 
bridegroom, Mr. Fitz, is the son of 
Charles Francis Fitz of Newton and 
the late Mrs. Fitz. He is a nephew 
of the late Walter Scott Fitz, whose 
widow resides at 75 Beacon street, 
Boston, and has a summer home at 
Manchester, and also of Dr. Regi- 
nald H. Fitz, who lives in Arlington 
street, Boston, and is also a summer 
resident of Manchester. He was ac- 
tive in athletics when at Harvard, 
where he was graduated in the class 
of 1899, and was pitcher on the base- 
ball team when in college. Since his 
eraduation he has been in the rail- 
roading business in the Far North- 
west, with headquarters at North 
Yakima, not far from Seattle. 
oOo 9°09 
Mrs. Gordon Prince is entertain- 
ing her mother, Mrs. Chickering at 
her West Manchester cottage. Mrs. 
Chickering ‘arrived last Friday from 
Maine. She is a weleome and an- 
nual visitor, devoted, as is her 
daughter, to this beautiful section of 
the North Shore. 
