24 N Osha oe 
S SHOR ak 
TO RENT 
Chalmers Detroit 
30 Horse Power 
Touring Car 
Would like to rent with or with- 
to a competent 
out driver, 
party. 
In Perfect Condition; almost New. 
Apply to 
J. E. RYAN 
Rowe’s Garage 
Magnolia 
H000000000000000000 000000000 
HOO 0000000000 00000 O0O0O00000 
Women’s Club House, Magnolia Telephone 3 
MRS. SUSAN S. KNAPP 
MASSEUSE 
THOROUGH EXPERT SCIENTIFIC MASSAGE 
Magnolia, Mass. 
Graduate of the Pennsylvania Orthopz- 
dic Institute and School of Mechano 
Therapy, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa. 
090000000000 000000000000 00000 
MRS. S. H. ROBERTSON 
VISITING MASSEUSE and CHIROPODIST 
Manicuring Scalp Treatment 
Shampooing Facial Massage 
WOMEN’S CLUB, MAGNOLIA 
Telephone 122-3 
MISS KATHERINE HENNESSY 
Manicure, Massage 
Scalp Treatment, Shampoo 
Will call at residence if desired 
Masconomo Hotel, Manchester, Mass. 
Antiques 
A fine private’ Collection of 
Original and Genuine An- g 
tiques. 
59 Charleshank Road 
Newton, Mass, 
About 2 Blocks from Square. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
President Taft will make a week- 
end visit to Montserrat. He will 
arrive there Sunday morning and 
expects to return to the capital Sun- 
day night. Sec. Hilles is expected to 
accompany him and Major Butt will 
do his usual escort duty. From the 
present indications it is doubtful if 
the President comes to Beverly for 
the summer much before the middle 
of next month. The executive offi- 
ces are to be established in the 
Board of Trade rooms in the Mason 
building on Cabot street, Beverly, 
and Secretary Hilles when he comes 
on Sunday will pay a personal visit 
to the rooms. The Taft battery of 
automobiles is complete with the ex- 
ception of the big car which the 
President is using in Washington, 
and will be brought to Beverly as 
soon as Congress adjourns. The 
President will be away from Bev- 
erly much in September, but plans 
to return in October and enjoy the 
rare delights of the Indian summer 
which have poved so attractive to 
Mrs. Taft in past seasons. 
oOo 9°94 
F. K. M. Rehn of New York, will 
open his Magnolia studio (opposite 
The Hesperus) to visitors, this com- 
ing Saturday. An interesting fea- 
ture of his present collection is his 
very unusual painting ‘‘In the Glit- 
tering Moonlight,’’ which attracted 
so much attention in the National 
Academy of Design, N. Y., last 
spring. 
oOo 909 
Among the North Shore colonists 
at the Allen-Gibson wedding at Na- 
hant, Wednesday, were Mr. and 
Mrs. Gordon Abbott, Mr. and Mrs. 
Boylston A. Beal, Mr. and Mrs. S. 
V. R. Crosby, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. 
Curtis and the Misses Curtis, Mr. 
and Mrs. Alexander Cochrane, Mr. 
and Mrs. F. L. Higginson, Mr. and 
Mrs. Wm. Hooper, Mr. and Mrs. 
Gardiner M. Lane, Mr. and Mrs. 
Harold Coolidge, Mr. and Mrs. T. 
J. Coolidge, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. 
W. C. Endicott, Mrs. E. Preble Mot- 
ley and Mr. and Mrs. Neal Rantoul. 
00°09 
The guests for the stag dinner 
yesterday at the Breaden-Cheese 
Motor Club at Cohasset included 
George 8. Mandell, former M. F. H. 
of the Myopia Hunt Club; Gen. Wm. 
A. Baneroft, Harrison Gray Otis, 
Lieut.-Gov. Frothingham, Col. Wm. 
A. Bunting, H. Staples Potter, H. 
W. Hayes, Maj. Charles Hayden, 
Col. George B. Billings, Frank W. 
Seabury, Alexander H. Higginson, 
W. A. Morse, John Shepard, H. W. 
Forbes and C, H, Carter, 
BR OES EZ. OE 
Otto H. Kahn, the New York fi- 
nancier and friend of J. Pierpont 
Morgan, and a summer resident of 
Manchester one season, favors an in- 
vestigation into the purchase of ex- 
pensive paintings by wealthy Amer- 
icans from certain foreign agents 
with representatives in the United 
States, many of which are said to be 
spurious. Mr. Kahn, himself, has 
spent nearly $10,000,000 on. famous 
masterpieces. He is also said to be 
concerned in the loan of $10,000,000 
which ex-Pres. Bonila of Honduras 
is opposing at Washington. 
o9o°900° 
Fraulein Wolters, who is well 
known to North Shore people is ar- 
ranging for a series of three Ger- 
man readings to be given at North 
Shore homes during August on 
Tuesdays at eleven o’clock. Com- 
plete arrangements have not yet 
been made, but, we understand that 
Mrs. W. H. Moore is to open ‘‘ Rock- 
marge’’ her Pride’s Crossing home 
for one of the dates and Mrs. R. H. 
Fitz of ‘‘The Mountain,’’ West 
Manchester, for another. 
00909 
A bridge tournament for the bene- 
fit of the Magnolia Library will be 
held at the Magnolia Library hall 
on Thursday, August third, at 3 
o’clock. Tea will be served at 5 
o’clock. Prizes have been donated 
by Hodgson, Kennard & Co., Grande 
Maison de Blane, Ovington Bros., 
and also by Roger Noble Burnham, 
the sculptor. Tables at $6. or single 
tickets at $1.50 each may be obtain- 
ed at the Magnolia Library, the 
Oceanside Hotel newstand, or by 
mail from Otis Weld Richardson, 
Treas., Magnolia. 
090909 
Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Gilman of 
New York, the noted writer and 
lecturer, will give an address at the 
house of Miss Sarah S._ Perkins, 
West Beach, Beverly Farms, on 
Monday, July 31st, at 4.30 p.m. The 
subject is ‘‘Our Brains and What 
Ails Them.’’ Cards of admission 
may be had by applying to Miss 
Perkins. 
Mrs. Bill’s shop on Lobster lane, 
Magnolia—The sign of the Fish— 
is the mecea of North Shore people 
who are looking for unusual things 
of decorative value for their sum- 
mer homes, particularly in the line 
of Chinese and Japanese art. They 
earry there a select line of baskets, 
Shantung tables, bamboo — serving 
trays, Japanese prints, embroideries, 
ete. Their shop is a very interesting 
place and North Shore people should 
not fail to visit it. 
