22 1s tis, OIG) ead ee of SHE ee OR dae OF BR hyo ae 
“MIZPAH’” 
To Let by the Day or Hour ‘ 
CHAS LOVEGREEN, Prop. 
Manchester, Mass. 
Anyone interested in old embroid- 
eries should not fail to visit the 
Robert Hyde Studio on Bridge 
street, Manchester. There they can 
see some rare Florentine and Roman 
vestments and altar clothes; also 
hand-wrought jewelry and ‘‘Opus 
Pictures’’ novelties especially suit- 
eight passengers comfortably. 
launch for Motor Boat sails along the beau- 
tiful North Shore 
Masconomo Park. 
590 Fifth Avenue, New York 
MILLINERY 
Veils 
Children’s Clothes 
Open from June to October 
Accommodates 600 
Magnolia, Mass, 
% h. p. Motor Boat, 27 ft. long, will carry 
A splendid 
The boat may be found at the float at 
Tel. 9-11 
able for bridge prizes. Studio 
closed Thursdays. 
Work done at your residence if 
desired anywhere from Manchester 
to Pride’s Crossing. J. Vasconeellos, 
barber, Central square, Manchester. 
Telephone 53-12. 
“MIS S@ESGR, RiGE 
The Smith Building, Magnolia 
Gowns and Motor Coats for Misses and Small Women 
Polo Coats Sweaters 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Caleb Loring, son of Judge and 
Mrs. W. C. Loring of Boston and 
Pride’s, is enroute from his ex- 
tended trip abroad and will make 
San Francisco the home port of his 
landing. While returning east, he 
will visit the Grand Canyon in 
Arizona. 
0°99 
Wm. Wood, Jr., and Miss Rosa- 
lind Wood of Boston and Pride’s are 
at Sugar Hill, N. H., for a sojourn. 
Mr. Wood, Sr., is on a business trip 
to New York, and is registered at 
Hotel Astoria. 
oOo 909 
Ilome-comers from Europe — to 
reach Pride’s this week were Mr. 
and Mrs. Robert S. Bradley and Miss 
Leshe Bradley of Boston. They 
were passengers on the Franconia. 
oOo9 9 
The visit of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. 
Harding of New York at- ‘‘ Eagle 
Rock,’’ occasioned much entertain- 
ing in their honor by the HH. C. 
Fricks. On the conelusion of their 
visit Tuesday, they went to Sea- 
bright, N. J. 
oOo 9°09 
Another engagement recently an- 
nounced is greatly interesting North 
Shore society. The latest candidates 
for matrimonial honors are Miss 
Hannah Wheelwright Cobb, daugh- 
ter of Mr, and Mrs. Charles Kane 
Cobb of Dunster road, Chestnut Hill, 
Boston, and Wm. Appleton Law- 
rence of Commonwealth avenue, 
Boston, Harvard 1911, elder son of 
the Rt. Rev. and Mrs. Wm. Law- 
rence, and nephew of Amory A. 
Lawrence of the Hospital Point, 
Beverly, colony. Among the social 
functions given this winter for Miss 
Cobb, who was a debutante, was the 
brilliant ball given by Mr. and Mrs. 
Charles Sumner Bird, parents of 
Mrs. Louis Agassiz Shaw of Beverly 
Farms, at the Bird estate, ‘‘En- 
dean,’’ Walpole. 
