36 NOR T H 
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BPR Aw BE: [Zo 
actually the only permanent policy. 
It brings with it real ease of mind, 
contentment, honor and power— 
which after all are the fair products 
of which a true business capital 
should afford. 
MAGNOLIA HOTELS. 
Mrs. James G. Batterson of New 
York city returned to the Oceanside 
last Sunday for a second visit this 
season. She has been touring since 
leaving here several weeks ago. 
Count Maroni of Rome, vice con- 
sul at New Orleans, is spending 
August at the Oceanside. 
Mrs. A. MeLean and William J. 
Fields of Newark, N. J., are among 
the new arrivals at the Oceanside 
this week. 
Miss M. E. Otis of Chicago came 
to the Oceanside last Monday to 
spend August, joining Mrs. Nicholas 
de Teresa and her daughter, Miss 
de Teresa of the same city, who have 
been here some weeks. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hobson of Lit- 
tle Boar’s Head, N. H., Mr. and Mrs. 
John A. Davis and Miss Amo Ses- 
sions were entertained last Tuesday 
at luncheon at the Oceanside by Mr. 
and Mrs: J. C. Kerr. 
Mrs. Charles 8. Forbes and Miss 
Martha Meeker of New York are at 
the Oceanside for a visit. 
Please Kill That Fly! 
Why? 
Because :— 
1. Flies breed 
other filth. 
2. Flies walk and feed on excreta 
and sputa from people ill with ty- 
phoid fever, tuberculosis, diarrhoeal 
affections, and many other diseases. 
3. One fly can carry and may de- 
posit on our food 6,000,000 bacteria. 
4 One fly in one summer may pro- 
duce normally 195,312,500,000,000,- 
000 descendants. 
5. A fly is an enemy to health,— 
the health of our children, the 
health of our community! 
A fly cannot develop from the egg 
in less than 8 days; therefore, if we 
clean up everything thoroughly ev- 
ery week, and keep all manure 
screened, there need be no flies. 
Will you help in the campaign 
against this pest? 
Women’s Municipal League of 
Boston. 
in manure and 
Miss F. Finegan of New York, is 
announcing a reduction in all gowns 
and wraps for the remainder of 
August. Miss Finegan has a very 
select line of these goods in her store 
(with Rees & Rees), in the Donchian 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
North Shore society is greatly in- 
terested this week in the tennis 
tournament at the Essex County 
club, as nearly all the resorts are 
represented. Miss Helen Taft is 
playing in the tourney and on Tues- 
day she played with G. C. Caner. 
They beat Mrs. L. M. Cuthbert and 
EK. C. Fitz 7-5, 6-4. Other contest- 
ants are Mrs. W. A. Alexander, N. 
S. Bartlett, Miss F. S. Howard, E. 
H. Graham, Miss Gladys Munn, 8. 
V. R. Crosby, Miss Sarah Shattuck, 
W. W. Coe, Miss Elaine Denegre, 
H. S. MeKee, Miss D. Ballantyne, 
De La Breton, Miss C. Allen, D.C 
Pickman, Jr., Miss Martha Willett, 
H. F. Mason, Mrs. Oakes Ames, C. 
S. Cutting, Miss Margaret Curtis, 
Gurnee Munn, Mrs. Harold F. Ma- 
son, Ector Munn, Mrs. E. H. Gra- 
ham, Walter Reisinger, Miss Jones, 
G. Cabot, Miss B. Burr, 8. D. War- 
ren, Miss Eleanora Sears, Ralph Ro- 
maine, Mrs. Reginald Boardman, 
John Reece, Miss Leslie Bradley, R. 
S. Lovering, Mrs. R. De Rham, 
Lawrence Morgan, Mrs. 8. Borden, 
Jr., S. T. Burr, Jr., Miss E. Phillips, 
R. Fitz, Misses Grace Monks, C. 
Hanks, Rosamond Eliott, Elizabeth 
Bigleow, Hope Norman, Mrs. H. P. 
McKean, Evelyn Sears, the Misses 
McInnes, M. Stackpole, Edith Fab- 
yan, Kate Tweed, C. L. Read, L. 
Bradley, M. Lee, J. Dorr, Alice 
Thorndike, Mrs. Percy D. Haughton 
and many others. 
Boylston A. Beal, who has been in 
Europe on a short holiday, is expect- 
ed home this week. — 
Mrs. Adelaide Fairbanks Tim- 
mons, wife of John W. Timmons, 
U.S.N., is the guest of her brother, 
Warren Fairbanks, at Beverly 
Farms, where he has the Nathaniel 
S. Simpkins place this season, called 
‘“Willow Brook Cottage.’’ Mrs. 
Timmons is the daughter of former 
Vice President and Mrs. Charles 
Warren Fairbanks, who are ex- 
pected to arrive soon at Beverly 
Farms for a visit. Mrs. Timmons, 
who frequently assisted her mother 
at her official receptions in Washing- 
ton, was a student at Ohio Wesleyan 
University when she first met her 
husband, also a student there. Since 
their marriage she has journeyed to 
various foreign ports where his 
eruises took him. 
o°o9°9 
Mrs. Perey D. Haughton, wife of 
the Harvard football coach, won the 
plaudits of a large representation of 
North Shore society folk, who were 
bathing last Sunday at the Singing 
Beach, Manchester. Mrs. Haughton 
made quite the longest swim a wo- 
man has ever made on the North 
Shore this season. She swam from 
the beach to a rock half a mile from 
the shore. She did not swim back 
to the beach, but was rowed back 
by Mr. Haughton. 
00909 
Seats for the Magnolia Horse 
Show go on sale at the Oecanside 
Hotel, Magnolia, Monday. From 
present indications, the show this 
year will surpass all other efforts in 
this line ever attempted. Many 
North Shore girls and young men 
have entered in the various classes. 
Wm. E. Chamberlin. 
William E. Chamberlin of 27 Clin- 
ton street, Cambridge, architect of 
the Cambridge English high school, 
Cambridge Hospital, the Harvard 
Trust Company, and many other 
buildings, died at the home of Geo. 
W. Abbott, at West Manchester, 
last Sunday. While he had been an 
invalid for twenty years his death 
was unexpected. 
Born in Cambridge 55 years ago, 
he graduated from the Institute of 
Technology, spent some time with 
the firm of McKim, Mead & White 
in New York and three years in 
Paris before settling in Boston. 
His wife, Emily Abbot Chamber- 
lin, one brother and one sister sur- 
vive. 
Funeral services were held in Mt. 
Auburn Chapel Tuesday forenoon at 
11.30 o’clock, with the Rev. Samuel 
L. Crothers, pastor of the 
Baptist Church officiating. 
hody was cremated. 
The 
MARBLEHEAD. 
The tennis finals at the Oceanside 
hotel, Marblehead Neck, this week 
were watched by an _ enthusiastic 
gallery. The trophy was the Ocean- 
side Cup, presented by A. H. and 
EK. Lane, proprietors of the hotel. 
Frank Miller Willis, Yale 1911, of 
Worcester, won the cup defeating 
Godfrey T. Firth, Yale 1906, of 
Brooklyn, in straight sets, 6-2, 6-4, 
6-0. Those who participated in the 
semi-finals were W. J. Hickmott, Jr., 
Hartford; G. B. Ewing, Newton Cen- 
ter; C. R. Blackman, Colorado 
Springs; Edgar Lane, Boston. Other 
contestants were: A. H. Lane, J. H. 
McLeod, 2d, Boston; F. L. Willis, 
Worcester; K. MelIrwin, New Ha- 
ven; A. C. Hickmott, Hartford; Miss 
Ethel G. Miner, Washington, D.C.; 
Mildred Johnson, Stoughton, Wis.; 
Ida Seott, Cambridge; Ida L. Black- 
man, Colorado Springs; Eunice Av- 
ery, Springfield, 
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