10 
NORTH 
S3ar70 oR Er 
BREEZE 
FOR THE THANKSGIVING TABLE” 
In making your preparations for the Thanksgiving dinner do not 
forget your table silver. 
table service let us show you 
If you need some odd pieces to complete your 
Community Silver 
which is beyond question the best plated ware made today. 
Dainty 
and graceful in design, it is similar in style and appearance to the 
popular patterns of Sterling Silver. Specially thickened at the wearing 
points and toughened to withstand wear, it is not to be confused 
with ordinary plated ware. 
Butter Knife 
Sugar Spoon 
Cold Meat Fork 
Pie Server 
CTCAMmUaClGmsian si. tces $1.00 
Gravy Ladle 
Oystermladies..4:.:..%... «3.00 
Child’s Set 
F. 3. THOMPSON, JEWELER 
164 Main St., Gloucester 
Axel Magnuson 
FLORIST and LANDSCAPE GARDENER 
BRIDGE STREET, 
MANCHESTER. 
GHRYSANTHEMUMS 
Carnations and Violets, Flowering Plants 
Telephone 172-2 
A. H. Higginson, Pres. 
W. B. Calderwood, Supt. 
O. W. McGuire, ‘reas. 
DAVID FENTON CoO, Manchester-by-the-Sea 
MASS. 
Marine Railways, Boat Builders 
Paints, Oils, Varnish, Cordage, and all kinds of Hardware constantly on hand 
Yacht and Boat Repairing of every description, Yacht Tenders always in stock 
Boats stored for the Winter. 
ment of Launches. 
We carry everything appertaining to the equip- 
Spray Heods Made to Order 
towed in and out of channel, free of charge. 
Boats hauled on our railways, 
TELEPHONE 254 MANCHESTER 
The recently appointed American 
minister to Belgium, Larz Anderson, 
of Brookline, presented his letters 
to the King last Sunday. Mr. An- 
derson was accompanied by the le- 
gation staff and the Belgian foreign 
minister, M. Davignon. 
o°o909 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Souther of 
Hartford, Conn., who have a summer 
home at Bass Rocks, Gloucester, 
announce the engagement of their 
daughter Catherine to Winthrop 
Buttrick of Lowell. Mr. Buttrick, 
who is with Estabrook & Co., Bos- 
ton bankers, is a Williams graduate 
and the son of Fred W. Buttrick, 7 
president of the Lowell Savings 
Bank. Miss Souther is the grand- 
daughter of Judge Sherman of the 
Massachusetts Superior Court and 
the late Henry Souther of Boston, 
original owner of the entire Bass 
Rocks property. 
o90o90 0 
Mrs. John Caswell and family of 
the Beverly Farms colony have 
taken apartments at the Puritan, 
Commonwealth avenue, Boston, for 
the winter, 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Invitations went out the middle ot 
the week from Mr. and Mrs. Sewell 
Hi. Fessenden of Essex road, Chest- 
nut Hill, Boston, and Manchester, 
for a ball on the evening of Friday, 
December 8th, in the Somerset ball 
room, on which occasion they are to 
present their eldest daughter, Miss 
Caroline Fessenden, who is one of 
the most popular debutantes of the 
winter, a rarely pretty girl, for 
whom there will be an _ incessant 
round of entertaining. Miss Fessen- 
den is a granddaughter of Mrs. Geo. 
C. Lee of Chestnut Hill, and has a 
large and important affiliation to 
make her coming out season success- 
ful, including her cousin, Mrs. Nich- 
olas Longworth, whom she is rea- 
sonably sure to visit in Washington 
later in the season. 
g¢oO9 
There was much Boston and 
North Shore interest in the wedding 
on Monday at Burlington, lowa, 
where Miss Mary Russell Perkins of 
Burlington and Boston was married 
at noon at the family residence, the 
Apple Trees, to John Ghieves Me- 
Ilvain of the O-4 Bar Ranch of 
Ranchester, Wyoming. The cere- 
mony was performed by the Rev. 
Naboth Osborne of the First Con- 
gregational church of that city and 
was beautiful in its simplicity. The 
bride is the youngest daughter of 
Mrs. Perkins (Edith Forbes) and 
the late C. E. Perkins, president of 
the Burlington road. She is a mem- 
ber of the Vincent Club of Boston 
and a charter member of the Chil- 
ton Club. Mrs. William Hooper 
(Alice Forbes Perkins) of Boston 
and West Manchester, is her sister, 
and another sister is Mrs. George T. 
Rice (Margaret A. Perkins) of 
Westwood. The bride’s brothers are 
Robert Forbes Perkins, who was 
married in Kentucky, the middle of 
last summer, to Miss Evelyn M. 
Gray of that state and Charles E. 
Perkins of Commonwealth avenue, 
Boston, who married Miss Leila M. 
Amory. Like her mother, the bride 
is very much interested in philan- 
thropy, and is one of the most active 
workers of the Red Cross in the 
state of Iowa, being chairman of the 
Burlington division of the organiza- 
tion. Mr. and Mrs. Mellvain left 
shortly after the breakfast on a 
wedding trip. Among her _ brides- 
maids were the Misses Dorothy Jor- 
dan and Margaret Codman of Bos- 
ton. William Hooper of West Man- 
chester, uncle of the bride, was in 
Burlington to attend the wedding. 
Mr. and Mrs. Mellvain will live at 
Mr, Mellvain’s ranch in Wyoming, 
