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N Italian festa is to be given on the afternoon of 
Thursday, June 29, under the patronage of the Italian 
Ambassador and the Countess de Cellere, on the estate 
of the Hon. and Mrs. George von L. Meyer, “Rock Maple 
Farm” at Hamilton, from 4 until 7 o’clock, for the bene- 
fit of the New England Italian War Relief Fund. Tickets 
at $3 for adults and $1 for children may be had of any 
of the patronesses. The program will consist of dancing, 
for which a platform is to be erected, and there will pro)- 
ably be competitive dancing. There will be sideshows, 
fortune-tellers, silhouettes, and a group of Italian singers 
with mandolins and guitars. A well-supplied flower 
booth will be a feature of the occasion, and groups of so- 
ciety favorites, in Italian costume, will sell flowers, cigar- 
ettes and sweets. There will also be a refreshment booth. 
Of course there will be attractions for the juveniles. If 
the day is inauspicious, the festa will be held the following 
afternoon, Friday, June 30. 
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The Right Rev. William Lawrence, D. D., Bishop of 
Massachusetts, will visit St. John’s Episcopal church, 
Beverly Farms, at the morning service at 10 o’clock, Sun- 
day, June 25, to administer the rite of confirmation, and 
to preach. During his stay on the North Shore Bishop 
Lawrence will be the guest of Judge and Mrs. Wilham 
Caleb Loring of Pride’s Crossing. 
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The Ambassador of Italy and the Countess di Cellere 
are now in their summer home, Pitch Pine Hall, at Bev- 
erly Farms. 
3.0 
Mr. and Mrs. ous Robinson (Dorothy Jordan) 
plan to spend August on the North Shore, with the lat- 
ter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eben D. Jordan, West Man- 
chester. They have leased a beautiful place at Orange, 
N. J., and are settled there for the summer. Their house 
is on a high hill, said to be the highest elevation in the 
town, affording magnificent views of the surrounding 
country, the Hudson and glimpses of the Metropolis itself 
in the far distance. 
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~P —COPTPCAIHFR>RD ?DC RM MAD MAMAS 
DINNER DANCING 
A NAVY FESTIVAL 
In Aid of the 
CHARLESTOWN Y.M.C. A. BUILDING FUND 
Will Be Held at 
MR. AMOS A. LAWRENC E'S 
BEAVER POND, ESSEX ST., BEVERLY 
MONDAY EVENING, JULY 3 
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A FOOD BAZAAR will be held at the house of Mrs. M. 
Graeme Haughton, Pride’s Crossing, for the benefit of 
the North Shore branch of the society to protect children 
from cruelty, on Thursday, July 6, from eleven a. m. to 
six p.m. Admission free! Fruit and vegetables, cake, 
candy, salads, dairy products, etc., will be for sale; cold 
drinks and ice cream will be served. 
33 6° 
Mr. and Mrs. George Lee are planning to open their 
beautiful home, “Villa al mare,” at Beverly Farms, about 
the last of June. ‘Their son-in-law and daughter, M+. 
and Mrs. O. Turner (Marie Lee) have spent the winter 
with them in their Brookline home, where a little daugh- 
ter was added to the family circle of the Turners about 
six months ago, 
2 
o 206 
Mr. and Mrs. Fulton Cutting (Mary Josephine 
Amory) of Beverly Cove are receiving congratulations 
on the birth of their first child, a daughter. Mrs. Cut- 
ting is the daughter of Francis I. Amory of Chapman's 
Corner, Beverly Cove. 
4, 
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Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel S. Simpkins of Boston will! 
spend the early summer at Y® Rogers Manse in Ipswich 
before going to their Beverly Farms home, which is now 
occupied by Sen. and Mrs. Henry F. Lippitt of Washing- 
ton. The cottage is known as “Willowbrook” and ‘is 
situated off Hale street. 
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William Roscoe Thayer, the historian, Mrs. Thayer 
and Miss Margaret Thayer will pass the summer at the 
Sampson cottage, Manchester Cove, as usual. 
08.9 
Of the recent arrivals at Magnolia, are the Rev. Dr. 
Charles Wadsworths of Philadelphia. 
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Col. and Mrs. Henry FE. Russell, who have leased 
their attractive cottage, “Underledge,” at Manchester 
Cove, to the E. H. Alsops of Atlanta, Ga., left Boston 
this week for The Birches, Maine, where they have a 
camp, near the New Brunswick line for the summer. 
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