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W. C. LANGLEY & COMPANY 
Exchange Building 
53 State St., Boston 
19 Kilby Street, Boston 
BANKERS AND BROKERS 
Members 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. 
The George D. Wideners of Philadelphia and West 
Manchester, are spending a very quiet summer on the 
North Shore after their sojourn abroad. The social de- 
mands of Mr. and Mrs. Widener in their home city, 
curing winter season, are great, and they are recuperat- 
ing here to meet them. Five of their numerous list of 
motor cars have been brought to the shore. Peter A. 
B. Widener, father of George Widener, was a passenger 
on the incoming Olympic from. Europe. He plans to 
pay his son a visit soon and will make the trip by 
water in the Josephine, the Widener yacht. 
o O90 90 
W. B. P. Weeks and wife of Boston and Neptune 
street, Beverly, have returned from their sojourn in 
Castine, Maine. Mr. Weeks made the trip by water 
in his yacht and Mrs. Weeks went and came in the 
family auto. 
O° O10" 9 
H. Forbes Bigelow and family of Boston, have ar- 
rived at the Seabury cottage at Beverly Farms, which 
has been sub-let to them by the De Forrests of New 
York, for the remainder of the season. The De Forrests 
nave remained in Maine. Mrs. Bigelow, who was a 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Davis of Worces- 
ter and Pride’s, died a few years ago. Mr. Bigelow and 
ehildren make up the family party. 
o 9° 9°09 
Miss Semple, who has been at Kast Northfield, is 
now with her sister, Mrs. William E. Littleton, of 
- Philadelphia, at her Beverly pees cottage. 
Henry Clay Frick has donated unconditionally 
#3000 to the Gloucester fund for the proposed home for 
old-time fishermen, of which Dr. Dixwell of Boston, is 
the prime mover. 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
_ The MeNeal cottage, Pride’s Crossing, is occupied 
this season by the widow and family of the late Austin 
S. Heekscher of Philadelphia. Mrs. Heekscher is a 
sister-in-law of Mrs. Henry D. Burnham of Boston and 
Bar Harbor, and is a talented and clever composer, 
lier daughters, the Misses Celeste and Anna Leekscher, 
have a house party of friends at Pride’s. Miss Celeste 
Ileckscher is entertaining Miss Fitler of Haverford, Pa., 
and Miss Anna Heckscher has her two school friends, 
Miss Bowie of Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, and Miss 
spencer of Philadelphia as guests. Miss Anna Heck- 
scher is a clever horsewoman and is at. West Beach daily 
Criving down: ins her smart little pony trap. The 
Itechschers are not strangers to the North Shore, having 
summered at Bass Rocks.; They have a country place at 
Devon, Pa. 
oOo O09 
Mrs. Henry Pratt MeKean was hostess for a luneh- 
eon party on Tuesday and a dinner party on Thursday 
of this week at her Pride’s cottage. 
0°09 9 
Miss Gail Stephens of Detroit, joined her mother, 
Mrs. Henry Stephens at the Paine cottage, Pride’s 
Crossing, on Tuesday. Miss Stephens has been sojourn- 
ing in the White Mts. 
o 9° °° 
S. Reed Anthony and. family party of Boston, re- 
turned to their Beverly Farms summer home last 
Sunday after an extended Pacifie-Western trip. 
oO 90 
Mr. and Mrs. John Hays Hammond, Master Richard 
HTammond and Miss Nathalie Hammond, who have been 
spending the past month in the Seottish Highlands, left 
Liverpool, England, on the Franconia Tuesday. 
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 
