32 N.O ROTH: 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
The Misses Ellen, Amy and Sarah Bradley of 
Brookline and Manchester, have returned from their 
visit to York Harbor, where they were the guests of 
their aunt, Miss Aldis. 
0609090 
Amory A. Lawrence and bride of Boston and Hos- 
pital Point, Beverly, are sailing from New. York. Au- 
ooast 19th for a two months’ sojourn abroad. 
Samuel A. Culbertson of the Manchester. Cove col- 
ony, is in Louisville, Ky., on a week’s business trip. 
o°9o 9090 
Dr. John Warren, grandson of Mrs. G. Howland 
Shaw of Boston and Pride’s, and son of Dr. and Mrs. 
Collis Warren, is summering abroad. Mrs. Collis 
Warren is spending the summer with her mother, Mrs. 
Shaw. 
909090 
Miss Anita Peabody of the Dark Harbor, Maine, 
eolony coneluded a visit with Miss Margaret Thomas 
Le Of feos 
Bo Ree ZS 
HOLT? a 
ICE CREAM PARLORS 
18 School St., Marblehead, Mass. 
Telephone 301 
Telephone Orders a Specialty 
_Every Order Receives. Personal and Prompt 
Attention. 
Sohier of Boston and Burgess Point, Beverly, are leav- 
ing early next week for Northeast Harbor, Maine, to 
visit their aunt, Miss E. P. Sohier. Their sister, Mrs. 
Herbert B. Shaw, who is spending the summer with her 
parents, Col. and Mrs. Wm. D. Sohier, is leaving next 
week also for an August sojourn at Bretton Woods, 
N. H. 
ol Pride’s today. 
099090 
W. D. Sohier, Jr., and his sister, Miss Eleanor 
IPSWICH. BEACH 
The Associated Charities in 
which the summer colonists are ac- 
tively interested are arranging for a 
lawn party on Dr. Tucker’s lawn 
August 16th. 
Mr. and Mrs. Evans R. Dick, Jr., 
(nee Joan Tuckerman), are spending 
a portion of their honeymoon at 
Dark Harbor, Maine. 
Many Treaties. 
The State Department has been 
making numerous treaties with the 
various civilized nations — with 
Great Britain, Germany, France, 
Japan; treaties of commerce, peace, 
comity and arbitration. But among 
the most important treaties are 
those with Nicaragua and Honduras, 
involving national loans guaranteed 
by the customs receipts. These 
treaties are not yet ratified by the 
Senate, but the State Department 
hopes they will be almost any day, 
believing that they will prevent fu- 
ture revolutions and result in full 
protection to American interests in 
those countries. Nicaragua es- 
pecially is the scene of much activ- 
ity by American colonizers and’ in- 
vestors, and only assurance of peace 
and protection is needed to insure 
the development of the great re- 
sources of that country. 
Miss Finegan is at her Magnolia 
store for August, and is showing a 
very beautiful line of gowns and 
wraps. 
BLUFF. 
The Bijou Players of Boston, will 
give the Songs and Dances of Old 
Germany in the ball room of the 
Hotel Preston on the evening of 
Wednesday, August 9th. No ad- 
mission will be charged. The en- 
tertainment, however, will be given 
under the auspices of the Boston 
Traveler Charitable Society, and an 
opportunity to help its work by con- 
tribution will be offered. The work 
cf the Boston Traveler Outing De- 
partment has been so well known for 
ten years, and its contributors have 
included. so many hundreds of peo- 
ple, not only of Boston, but of other 
parts of the country, that little 
needs to be said of it. It is a publie 
fresh air charity, the largest in New 
England, and the children who re- 
ceive the benefit of its work are the 
children of the Boston’ tenements. 
Last summer, 6000 of these little 
ones were sent away, either to the 
beach, where the society maintains a 
cottage; or to the country, where 
there are three camps, one of them 
for convalescent children from the 
hospitals. This entertainment will 
be the first not directly given by the 
Preston management, ever presented 
in the hotel. The departure from 
the usual rule was made solely be- 
cause of the worthiness of the fresh 
air work, and through the kindness 
of J. S. Sherrard, manager of the 
Preston. 
Do you read the Breeze regularly ? 
MAGNOLIA HOTELS. 
Frederick §. Dellenbaugh, Jr., of 
New York city, came on from Crags- 
moor, New York, where he is spend- 
ing the summer with his parents, to 
spend the week with Mrs. de Teresa 
and her daughter, who are very 
pleasantly located at the Oceanside 
for the summer. 
William L. Bull, Jr., of New York 
City, joined his family at the Ocean- 
side over the last week-end. The 
Bulls are fond of Magnolia and have 
been coming here for a number of 
years. Mrs. Bull was one of the 
Heppenheimer girls of New York. 
The family has a country place at 
Greenwich, Conn. - 
Mrs. William Keyser and maid, 
and her grandson, C. Hughes Manly, 
came to Magnolia this week to join 
the former’s daughter, Mrs. William 
M. Manly and family, who are 
spending the summer at Sea Vista, 
one of the Oceanside cottages. The 
Manlys have a _ summer estate, 
‘*Killerslie,’? at Ellicott City, Md., 
one of the suburbs of Baltimore. 
Miss Anna Stranahan of Brook- 
line, is visiting her sister, Mrs. A. H. 
Morse at the Oceanside. Mrs. Morse 
is one of the most charming of the 
younger matrons at the Oceanside 
this summer. She, looked very at- 
tractive a few evenings ago in the 
lobby of the Oceanside in a white 
lingerie dress, and wearing a red 
hat with red feathers. 
The . Breeze reaches. more. North 
Shore people than any other paper, 
