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RENTALS on the North Shore the past week or two, 
heretofore unrecorded in this column, are reported 
through the office of T. Dennie Boardman, Reginald an‘ 
R. De B. Boardman of Boston and Manchester : 
The George Pierce house at Old Neck, Manchester, 
to Thomas P. Lindsay and family of Southboro and Bos- 
ton. 
The Morgan house on Proctor street, Manchester, 
to Russell Burrage of Boston. 
The Arthur W. Stevens house, off Summer street, 
Manchester, to Grange Sard of Albany, N. Y. 
The Hall Curtis yellow house at Beverly Farms to 
Frederic R. Galacar of 74 Mt. Vernon st., Boston. 
o 8 O 
Mrs. Ezra C. Fitch of West Manchester is visiting 
her daughter, Mrs. Julian P. Fairchild (Helen Fitch) at 
Glencove, L. I. For the week or more that she is gone, 
the Conover Fitches of Brookline, will be at “River- 
house.” Mr. and Mrs. Conover Fitch (Gladys Bogert) 
spent last season in Manchester, but are staying in their 
Chestnut Hill house this year with occasional trips. They 
came to “Riverhouse” June 20th and will remain over the 
Fourth. 
0.733 O 
The J. Warren Merrill cottage, ‘““Lodgehurst,” 0a 
Smith’s Point, Manchester, has been rented to the Allen 
T. Wests of St. Louis, Mo., who were here two years 
ago in the Bigelow cottage. 
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Frank ‘IT. Mitchell of Washington, D. C., has leased 
“Alabama,” the last of the Harris cottages, at Manches- 
ter. This is the place occupied last season by the Childs 
Fricks of Pittsburg, and is close to the Episcopal church 
on Masconomo st. 
$3 
Mrs. Marshall Field of Tea staN and Chicago has 
leased Bee Rock, the Norman place, at Cushing’s Poin‘, 
Beverly Cove, for the season. Mrs. Field has been with 
Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge at “Selwood,” Beverly 
Farms. She is an aunt of Mrs. Beveridge. 
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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 
DINNER DANCING 
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HE Macnoria Surcicar, Dresstncs Work Room has 
been started again in the Oceanside Annex. Work 
for the Allies will be carried on each week-day except 
Saturday from 9 till 2. A trained worker, Miss Elsie 
Page, will be in charge each day, and different groups of 
workers will choose the day most convenient for their 
attendance. The work will be sent to the main depart- 
ment of the committee which is at the Peter Bent brig- 
ham hospital in Boston, where it will be sterilized ready 
for shipment. Funds are earnestly solicited for the pur- 
chase of materials and it is hoped that many workers will 
respond. The president of the Magnolia branch is Mrs. 
William H. Coolidge; vice-president, Mrs. E. M. Binney ; 
treasurer, Mrs. George F. Willett; secretary, Mrs. E. B. 
Richardson, all of the Magnolia-Manchester colony. A 
preliminary meeting was held. last week in the bungalow 
on the Coolidge estate when the plans were made for the 
summer’s work. 
: 3 
Mrs. S. V. R. Crosby entertained ‘at luncheon Mon- 
day at her West Manchester home in honor of the wives 
of the Harvard class of 1891, which is celebrating its 
twenty-fifth anniversary. (For dinner they were enter- 
tained at the home of Mrs. Francis B. Crowninshield of 
Peach’s Point, Marblehead. 
re : o 28 0 
Mrs. Francis R. Spalding went over to New York 
the first of the week from her West Manchester home to 
see her son off with the motor squad of the New Yorx 
wilitia, which he has joined since going to New York. 
The young man, Evans Spalding, is in the New York 
office of the American Woolen Co. 
Oo 8% O 
Russell, the younger son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell S. 
Codman of Manchester, was one of the North Shore 
young men called away this week by President Wilson’s 
call for the militia. He is now with his company in 
Framingham. Mr. and Mrs. Codman’s other son, Charles 
R. Codman, 2d, is with the American Ambulance Corps 
in France. 
MUSIC FIREWORKS 
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