ba foes @ aarti eloed ee Os a BUR Eee ee 23 
i i 
33 - 33 
Max Littwi 
i ax Hittwmttz 
34 3% 
3 2e 
i NEW YORK 33 
: 3% 
33 i 1 . . Y 
i Embroidered Table and Bed Linens Hand Embroidered Linen and Lace Ss 
3 Towels and Table Laces Gowns and Blouses # | 
i Makers of Exclusive Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Handkerchiefs # 
Cleaning and Lace Mending 4 
33 3% 
33 . . . 2 
2 Our New Building is at 7 East 47th Street 33 
3 , : 33 
3 F Opposite the Ritz-Carlton. S 
3 
33 Season Shop, Smith Building, Magnolia, Mass. i 
: 3 
33 a 
33 Telephone 124 MAGNOLIA Formerly at 38 W. 33rd St. 
3 33 
i 7 E Ath St. % 
3 i 
; 33 
Shesnseaese TEGAN Se a  Bee a e eee Baa e ea eee ae ae eRe 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
September, one of the most beau- 
tiful and popular months on _ the 
North Shore, will have a most aus- 
picious opening socially, weather 
permitting. The affair in question is 
the Normandy Peasant Market to 
be held Friday, September Ist on 
the grounds of the 8S. V. R. Crosby 
estate, West Manchester, in aid of 
the Sunnyside Day Nursery of Bos- 
ton. The hours will be from 10 a. m. 
to 6 p.m. The managers of the fete 
are Mrs. Q. A. Shaw, Jr., Mrs. A. 
Blanchard, Mrs. S. V. R. Crosby, 
Mrs. T. Motley, Jr., Mrs. P. V. R. 
Ely, H. R. Dalton, Jr. and Boylston 
A. Beal. Among the patronesses are 
Mrs. William Howard Taft, Mrs. 
William Appleton, Mrs. Henry L. 
Higginson, Mrs. Walter C. Baylies, 
Mrs. James R. Hooper, Mrs. Wm. A. 
Burnham, Mrs. Arthur Hunnewell, 
Mrs. Alexander Cochrane, Mrs. 
Henry Cabot Lodge, Mrs. P. V. R. 
Ely, Mrs. William P. Lyman, Mrs. 
J. Murray Forbes, Mrs. William H. 
Moore, Mrs. John L. Gardner, Mrs. 
Charles S. Sargent, Mrs. Edward S. 
Grew, Mrs. Francis W. Sargent, 
Miss Charlotte H. Guild, Mrs. Rob- 
ert G. Shaw, Mrs. John Hays Ham- 
mond, Mrs. Washington B. Thomas. 
The affair promises to be most 
unique and picturesque. In the 
conduct of the fete, one hundred 
and two prominent society matrons 
and young women of the leading 
North Shore resorts, Manchester 
and Beverly in particular, will par- 
ticipate. Features of the fete out- 
side of the numerous and_ varied 
booths for the sale of various arti- 
cles will be a dancing pavilion man- 
aged by Mrs. Oliver Ames, from 4 
to 6 o’clock, Music by the ‘‘Coons,”’ 
Magnolia Branch of Che Indian Store Boston, Mass. 
Now at the “APPLE TREE COTTAGE?” the red cottage just off Fuller St., 2 or 3 
houses South of Magnolia Post Office 
INDIAN BASKETS, MOCCASSINS, ETC., TOYS AND GAMES, CURIOS, POTTERY. 
THE FAMOUS CURACAO HATS. 
SAE EL EEDA AS AA LIN DIED BD NG 9090000 000000000000OOOOOOOOD 
ANCL gE 
Devereux, 
Opp. Devereux Station, 
ROSERY 
Marblehead, Mass. 
Orders taken for Cut Roses by doz. or quantity from now on till Nov. 
Upwards of 1,000 different varieties, and 3,000 plants. 
Rose Bushes for spring delivery 1912 solicited. 
Early orders for 
Specialty made of study of 
varieties, plans for Rose Gardens and Landscape work. 
HARRIETT R. FOOTE, ROSARIAN 
Tel. 232-4 Marblehead 
HO0O0000000000000000000 0000000 90000000000 00000 OOOOOOOOOOOO 
Mrs. James TT. Procter will con- 
duct a Pony Grab and the Postal 
Photographs. There will be a 
Watermelon Christening. The spon- 
sors will be Sturgis Grew, D. Man- 
dell and John Procter. The borkers 
will be: ‘Thomas Procter, T. Rice, 
Samuel Mandell, John Merrill, Ed- 
ward Thompson, John Caswell. 
There will be amusements, side- 
shows and temperance bar con- 
ducted by Mrs. F. B. Crowninshield 
of Marblehead Neck. Afternoon tea 
will be served under the chairman- 
ship of Mrs. Hall Curtis. Her assis- 
tants will be Mrs. Wm. Rantoul, 
Miss Lavinia Newell, Miss Franks 
and Mrs. Neal Rantoul. <A bevy of 
eleven young women will assist at 
the tea room. Falaise, Marche de 
Fruit et Fleurs, will be under the 
chairmanship of Mrs. James Proe- 
ter. She will have eleven fruit and 
flower girls to assist her and six 
«young women as aids, The charity 
for which the Normandy market will 
be held is a most worthy one and 
combined with the broad and artis- 
tic lines of the fete it promises to 
have a very widespread and _note- 
worthy patronage. 
DEOT ORO 
A large dinner party is on the so- 
cial calendar of Mr. and Mrs. Henry 
Clay Frick, for this evening. ‘‘Ka- 
ele Rock,’’ their Pride’s mansion 
will be the scene of that social fune- 
tion. 
oOo 9°90 
Amory A. Lawrence and bride of 
the Hospital Point, Beverly, colony 
will be absent on their European 
trip until October 20th. It is very 
doubtful if they return to their 
Beverly cottage, but will make an 
autumn sojourn at the Lawrence 
country estate at Groton. Amos 
Lawrence will occupy his father’s 
estate at Beverly for the next two 
months. 
