58 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
June 30, 1916. 
We oH at VO Rib’ R Y 
LADIES’? HAIRDRESSING ‘making a specialty of the 
17 W. 42D ST., NEW YORK 
SUMMER ADDRESS : 
JULY 2—SEPTEMBER 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Telephone 8210 
at 
finmesivead Cra Konus 
=—Antiques-=- 
Fancy ARTICLES BraAtmwED Rucs 
Luncheon and Afternoon Tea 
Every Day 
SPECIAL LUNCHEONS By APPOINTMENT 
Orders Taken For Dressed Dolls—Work By . 
Expert of Years Experience 
Sea St., Manchester-by-the-Sea 
Phone 93 
PERMANENT WAVE 
Newest Permanent Undulating Apparatus 
Complete Apparatus Portable =-- -- 
Taught by the Inventor of the Machine, and Indorsed by Him 
Work Done at Your Residence 
MARY GREENAWAY 
STUDIO OF DESIGN 
SPECIALIZING IN HATS FOR GENTLEWOMEN 
BOSTON 
420 BERKELEY ST. 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
“STUDIO HOUSE” PINE ST. 
[¢ is rather an interesting bit of history in the family of 
Mrs. James D. Safford of Manchester that her son, 
Lieut. Ralph K. Safford, Co. B, 2d Regt. (Mass.), who 
has just left for the border, is following so closely in the 
steps of his grandfather, General’ R. W. Kirkham, U. 53. 
Army, who nearly three-quarters of a century ago de- 
fended the honor of his country in the identical foreiga 
land and against the perfidy of the same nation in 1848. 
General Kirkham being aide to General Winfield Scott, 
participated in the battles of Vera Cruz, Molino del Rey, 
San Antonio and Churubusco. Lieut. Safford is a mem- 
ber of the Astec club of Washington, an honor handed 
down to him from his grandfather. 
Oo 8 9 
“The Homestead,”: Manchester’s new tea room on 
Sea street, is preparing to have an interesting exhibit 51 
doll clothes made by a doll’s dressmaker, who will take 
orders for the summer. 
oO % O 
Notable among the week’s arrivals at the Aborn and 
cottages, Magnolia, are H. A. Royce, Boston; Mrs. W. T. 
White, Lowell, Mass.; F. H. Kendall, Belmont; Mr: and 
Mrs. G. W. Rockwood, West Medford; S. M. Averill, 
Boston; Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Radfield, Mrs. J. H. Rad- 
field, Greenwich, Ct., Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Haskell, Miss 
Katherine Haskell, Miss Lydia L. C. Wright, Wakefield, 
Mass.; Mrs. W. S. Kennard, Boston; Maurice Husick, 
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HAS OPRENEDTHER:- SUMMER ISEoOrR 
5 LEXINGTON ROW, MAGNOLIA 
WITH A DISPLAY OF 
Gowns, Lingerie, Tub Dresses, Waists, Wraps, Sweaters and Sport Clothes 
MILLINERY 
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Boston; Hattie Fenner, New York, and Mrs. E. White, 
Boston. Mrs. S. R. Richards, Miss Nicolle and C. H. 
Hotchkiss of Shrewsbury, Canada, composed a motor 
party which spent several days this week at the Aborn, 
having motored all the way from Canada. 
Oo 3 
Mrs. John Alexander Rogers of Chestnut st., Bos- 
Charles H. Bond of Commonwealth ave. and ‘‘Peace- 
ton, formerly Miss Mildred Bond, daughter of Mrs. 
haven,” Swampscott, and Miss Nelly Ormond of Peter- 
boro st., Boston, have opened a. studio of costume design 
at Manchester in the former Manchester Tea Rooms. 
Miss Ormond and Mrs. Rogers have both studied art as 
a preliminary to their business venture, Mrs. Rogers hay- 
ing been a pupil at the Julian Art Academy in Paris. It 
is said that Mary Greenaway (the business name used by 
Mrs. Rogers) makes a study of the personality of her 
friends to give them the most suitable hats and that her 
particular aim is to accentuate, by wearing the correct 
hat, the upward lines of the profile, thereby giving the 
best possible contour. | 
Ten percent of the earnings of the studio will be de- 
voted to three charities in which Mrs. Rogers is inter- 
ested. 
Pleasant words are valued and do not cost much. 
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