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BREEZE 11 
W. C. LANGLEY & COMPANY 
BANKERS AND BROKERS 
19 Kilby Street, Boston 
Iembers of New York and Boston Exchanges 
10 Wall Street, New York 
SUMMER BRANCH OFFICE 
OCEANSIDE HOTEL, MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
Our office is equipped with a direct wire to Boston and New York and we offer every facility for the 
execution of orders in all markets. 
We cordially invite you to use this office in the transaction of any business that you may have during 
the summer months. 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
Mrs. Buckner M. Randolph (Clara P. Rathbone), of 
Washington, wife of Dr. Randolph, has been spending 
the week with Mrs. L. Z. Leiter of ‘‘Edgewater,’’ the 
Leiter summer home at Beverly Farms. The Randolphs 
lave a summer place at Casanova, Va. Miss Helen Taft 
is a very frequent caller at the Leiter cottage, with its 
broad verandas opening onto West Beach and with a 
cool breeze always blowing in from the ocean. Mr. and 
Mrs. Joseph Leiter have given several informal lunch- 
eons in Miss Taft’s honor, including one on Monday of 
this week. 
090900 
J. N. Wyllis of Toledo, Ohio, who has the Loring 
cottage at Pride’s Crossing for the season, has returned 
from a business trip to the west. Mr. Wyllis is one of 
the leading figures in the corporation building the Over- 
land car. He is delighted with the splendid roads which 
abound through the North Shore, and has enjoyed mo- 
toring at its best. Mr. Wyllis is much interested in the 
new law recently passed by the state legislature which 
compels horse drawn vehicles to carry lights after dark, 
and says that Massachtisetts has set a standard for 
cther states to follow. 
oOo 9°09 
Mrs. Henry Pratt McKean spent a portion of the 
week with her brother, Robert Gould Shaw, 2d, and 
family at Lake Sunapee, N. H. Her sons, Harry P. Me- 
Kean, Jr., and Q. A. Shaw McKean, found pleasant 
Civertissement also during their mother’s absence the 
former being at Narragansett Pier, the latter at Pen- 
livn, Pa. 
oOo 9 4 
Stopping with Mrs. George Scott Winslow at her 
summer home at Beverly Farms is Mrs. Winslow’s 
mother, Mrs. Glidden, who is a welcome guest always. 
Gordon Dexter and family have returned to Beverly 
Farms after an extended yachting trip. 
o> Kn S07 
Mrs. Allen Curtis and Miss Evelyn Curtis returned 
to Beverly Farms from their extended European trip 
Tuesday. They had their motor car and chauffeur with 
them abroad, motor trips being interesting features of 
their travels this year as in times past. 
o O90 
A short trip to New York filled in the last week- 
end very pleasantly for the L. C. Hannas of the Beverly 
Iarms contingent. 
oOo 9 0 
Dr. Warren of Boston, is the house guest of Mrs. 
G. Howland Shaw of Boston and Pride’s. 
o° °° 
The initial week of August started very festively 
with quite a round of dinners and luncheons. Monday, 
Mrs. Lucius M. Sargent gave a luncheon party at her 
beautiful new mansion at Pride’s. Covers were placed 
for ten. Tuesday, Miss Juliette Higginson gave a dinner 
ut Pride’s. Twelve guests. enjoyed her hospitality. On 
the same evening Herbert M. Sears gathered a congenial 
cinner company about him at ‘‘ Woodrock,’’ his beauti- 
ful Pride’s estate. Wednesday evening, Mrs. A. P. 
Cardner, wife of Congressman Gardner, inaugurated 
the first of her social entertainments as a summer resi- 
dent of Pride’s. There were ten guests for dinner that 
evening. The Gardner yacht is also in commission as a 
social acquisition for the family and their guests. 
oOo 99 
There was a luncheon party last Saturday for eight 
at “*Allanbank,’’ Beverly Cove, Mrs. Bryce J. Allan 
extending the hospitalities of the occasion. 
In months of sun so live that in months’ of. rain 
thou shalt still be happy. —From the ‘‘Mahabharata.’’ 
For an Investment or Home 
We have the biggest and grandest property in this part of the country. 1380 acres, connected to the main- 
land by a good road—5 miles of hard sand beach. A sheltered anchorage for any sized boat at any tide. 
The grand old ocean on one side—a safe, big inland bay on the other. Facilities for Bathing, Boating and 
Fishing—unexcelled in the world. It joins the magnificent estate of Richard T. Crane, Jr., of Chicago. 
Capable of being developed into the grandest estate in this part of the country. 
B. FRANK RAYMOND, Essex 
