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SOCIETY NOTES 
The Francis M. Stanwoods closed 
their cottage at Smith’s Point, Man- 
chester, Wednesday and removed to 
their Boston residence on Ivy street. 
990900 : 
The Amory Eliots have returned 
to Manchester after several weeks’ 
sojourn in New York. 
o°Oo°0 90 
Among the debutantes chosen so 
far as members of the 1911-12 are 
several with North Shore affiliations. 
They are Gertrude Amory, Eleanor 
Baneroft, Elizabeth Bigelow and 
Florence Lee. 
o°o°0 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley L. Pickman 
of Boston and Beverly have been 
registered at Red Lion Inn, Stock- 
bridge. 
00909 , 
Among the boxholders and _pa- 
tronesses for the benefit matinee in 
aid of the Home of the Good Shep- 
herd at Pittsburg, November 16th, 
are Mrs. D. Herbert Hostetter and 
Mrs. John R. McGinley. Miss May 
Irwin will be the attraction. She 
will appear at the Alvin Theatre 
in ‘‘ Mrs. Tompkins.’’ 
00900 
Among the ee holders for the 
Metropolitan Opera season in New 
York are the R: Fulton Cuttings and 
the Henry lay Fricks. 
o°o 9° 
Andrew W ae Anthony of Bos- 
ton and Beverly Farms, and his fi- 
ancee, Miss Elizabeth Colt of Provi- 
dence, were among the guests last 
Saturday at a dinner party in their 
honor’ at. the Plaza, New York. 
Col. Samuel Pomeroy Colt was the 
host. “Miss Colt’s parents and sister, 
Miss Beatrice Colt, were also 
among the guests. 
; oOo 9° 4 
Lord Camoys, who is to marry 
Miss Mildred Sherman on the 2d of 
December at the Sherman mansion 
on Fifth avenue in New York, is to 
give his farewell bachelor dinner on 
Monday, November 27th, at the 
Plaza. A number of the wedding 
guests will arrive from Europe in 
time for it. Lord Decies, who is al- 
ready and is to be one of the judges 
at the horse show, will probably be 
best man for Lord Camoys, who was 
an usher at his wedding in Febru- 
ary. Mrs. Lawrence Gillespie, Miss 
Sherman’s only sister, both the 
young women familiar attendants at 
several of the Country Club races, 
will be matron of honor. Lord 
Camoys and his bride will sail ae 
or- 
Henley- 
9th of December, for the 
mer’s home in England, 
on-Thames. 
» H ©) BE 
BREEZE 
413 
The Chas. B. Taylors of Glouces- 
ter street, Boston, are planning to 
remain at ‘‘The Craigs,’’ Smith’s 
Point, Manchester, all winter. 
In the death of Alfred Stackpole 
Dabney of Boston, many prominent 
North Shore families are plunged in 
mourning, particularly the Freder- 
ick R. Sears, Herbert and Phillip 
Sears families, since Mrs. Stackpole 
was Miss Tina Sears. At the fun- 
eral Thursday of last week at Em- 
manuel chureh, Boston, there was a 
large and representative gathering 
of North Shore families. 
o°o°09° 
Miss Dorothy Jordan did not re- 
turn to America with her parents, 
Mr. and Mrs. Eben D. Jordan, but 
remained over in Paris for the 
month of November. . 
o°o 9° : 
Mr. and Mrs. Payne Whitney, 
late of the Manchester colony, were 
prominently identified with last 
Saturday’s meet of the United Hunts 
at Belmont Park, New York. Mrs. 
Whitney’s horse won the Smith- 
town steeplechase. 
6999 
Retired Paymaster Charles Little- 
field, U.S. N., and Mrs. Littlefield of 
Kansas City and Magnolia, were at 
the recent tea given by Mrs. DeWitt 
Talmadge at Flagg Rock, Hot 
Springs, the ‘guests going over in 
buckboards. 
The Ten Commandments of the 
Business World 
First. Thou shalt not wait for 
something to turn up, but thou shalt 
pull off thy coat and go to work, 
that thou mayest prosper in thine 
affairs and make “failure” to spell 
“success. ’ 
Second. Thou fiat be’ on time, 
that is, just a little aliead of time, 
so that thine employers or superior 
officers may count upon thy presence 
and interest; for promptness and 
reliability will cover a multitude of 
shortcomings; but if thou shalt re- 
peatedly fail this, sooner or later 
thy job will go to another. 
Third. Thou shalt not be content 
to go about thy business looking 
like a bum, for thou shouldst know 
that thy personal appearance is 
better than a letter of recommenda- 
tion. 
Four. Thou shalt not try to make 
excuses, nor shall thou say to those 
that chide thee “‘T didn’t think,” 
for that is a fool’s excuse. 
‘Fifth. Thou shalt not wait to be 
told what thou shalt do, nor in what 
manner thou shalt oop nor shalt 
thou employ ” thyself: » hiling 
time’’ ;—thus miay thy ee be long 
e the job which fortune hath given 
thee. 
Sixth. Thou shalt not fail to 
maintain thine own integrity, nor 
thy proper dignity, nor to control 
thy thoughts as well as thy outward 
acts, nor shall thou be guilty of any- 
thing that shall lessen thy good re- 
spect for thyself. 
Seventh. Thou shalt not covet the 
other fellows job, nor his salary nor 
the position that he hath gained by 
his own hard labor. 
Eighth. Thou shalt not fail to live 
within thine income, nor shalt thou 
contract any debts that thou canst 
not see thy way clear to pay, and 
that right early. 
Ninth. Thou shalt not hesitate to 
say ‘‘no’’ when thou meanst ‘‘no,”’ 
nor shalt thou fail to remember that 
it is unsafe to bind thyself by a 
hasty judgment. 
Tenth. Thou shalt give unto ev- 
ery man a square deal. This is the 
last and great commandment and 
there is none other like unto it. 
Upon this commandment hang all 
the- law and the abiding profits of 
the business world. 
‘‘T am strongly inclined to think 
that your husband has appendi- 
citis,’’ said the physician. 
‘““That’s just like him,’’ answered 
Mrs. Cumrox. ‘‘He always waits till 
everything has pretty near gone out 
of style before he decises to get it.’ 
9? 
Under New Management 
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Make The Boston Herald your News- 
paper for 1911. Order eof the News- 
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