lor) 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Cleansers - Dyers - Repairers 
COLLECTED 
TUESDAYS 
DELIVERED 
FRIDAYS 
" 
BRANCH OFFICES AT 
Durgin, Jacobs Co., 218 Cabot St., Beverly 
Mrs. Bennett, 3 Lexington Row, Magnolia 
The Oceanside Hotel, ‘“‘Desk’’ Maguolia 
HE wedding at Fresh Water Cove, Gloucester, on 
Thursday of last week of Miss Marcy Irvin Curtin, 
the niece of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Foster of Wash- 
ington, and Charles Beaver Browne of Philadelphia, was 
one of the very delightful events of the season at this 
part of the Gloucester shore. The ceremony took place 
at “The Boulders,” the summer home of the Fosters 
overlooking Gloucester harbor, and was performed at 
four o’clock in the afternoon by Rev. Dr. Charles Candee, 
brother-in-law of the groom, of Wilmington, Del., as- 
sisted by Rev. Dr. Walter S. Eaton of Magnolia. The 
Episcopal single ring service was used. The house, a 
beautiful place of the bungalow type, was attractively 
decorated with cut flowers and ferns and the porches 
overlooking the water were unusually attractive with 
evergreen and flowers. The bride, a charming blonde, 
wore a gown of white satin, cut rather low, and with 
train, trimmed with lace with a silver thread in it. <A 
long tulle veil was caught up with orange blossoms. She 
carried a bouquet of orange blossoms and _lilies-of-the- 
valley. The bridesmaid, Miss Frances Kibbee of Albany, 
wore a white lace frock trimmed with French flowers, 
and a plumed leghorn hat. She carried rosebuds. The 
best man was Dr. Charles Browne of Philadelphia, a 
brother of the groom. The other attendants were little 
Misses Sarah Browne, daughter of the groom, and Fran- 
ces Crowell, a cousin of the bride, as flower girls, and 
Samuel Browne, as page. The little girls wore pale blue 
chiffon dresses with pink ribbons. After the ceremony 
the fifty guests, nearly all of whom were members of the 
respective families, enjoyed a buffet lunch before the 
bride and groom started on a three weeks’ motor trip 
through the White Mountains and the Catskills. Mr. 
Browne, is a Princeton man and is a broker in Philadel- 
phia. Mrs. Browne has been one of the very attractive 
girls in Washington set, and a grand-daughter of former 
Governor Curtin of Pennsylvania. They will make their 
home in Wynnwood, Philadelphia. 
Thomas R. Goethals, sen of Colonel George W. 
Goethals of Panama Canal fame, was a recent guest of 
Eliot G. Mears at “Orchard Home,” Essex. Mr. Goethals 
was an usher at Mr. Mears’ wedding to Miss Gladys 
Chute in June. 
Only thoroughly trained 
competent servants (male 
or female) supplied.  Re- 
ferences personally and care- 
| fully investigated. .. 
MISS WILD 
Registry Office 
305 Fifth Ave., N. E. Gor. 3i1st., N. Y. 
Telephones 8822, 8823 Madison Square 
COLLECTED 
FRIDAYS 
DELIVERED 
TUESDAYS 
Miss Douglas, 123 Main St., Gloucester 
Miss Lethbridge, 3 Beach St., Manchester 
Dr. and Mrs. George H. Washburn of 377 Marlboro 
st., Boston, and Manchester, have announced the engage- 
ment of their only daughter, Miss Anna Loraine Wash- 
burn, to Rev. Basil Douglas Hall, pastor of the Congrega- 
tional church of Paris Hill, N. Y., a village some 10 miles 
distant from Utica. Rev. Mr. Hall, who graduated from 
Harvard with the class of 1909, is a son of Rev. Charles 
Cuthbert Hall, who was for many years president of the 
Union Theological seminary. Dr. and Mrs. Washburn 
are still at their summer home in Manchester, and will 
remain probably until the middle of October. 
Oo 8 
Dr. Henry F. Sears and family will remain at their 
summer home at Beverly Cove all the autumn, returning 
to Boston in November. 
oO & 
Miss L. Erdna Reggio of Boston, who has been 
spending the summer at the Catskills, is visiting her 
brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. Nicholas 
Reggio, at Beverly Farms. 
LAJ 
ve 
It is understood that the marriage of Miss Marion 
McGinley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John R. McGinley 
of Pittsburg, and Norman Storey Mackie, is to take place 
on the 10th of October. The McGinleys have not been 
on the North Shore, as cottagers, this year. They form- 
erly summered at Manchester. 
Mrs. John T. Brush and daughter, who have been 
occupying a cottage at Magnolia this summer, have re- 
turned to New York city for the winter. They will spend 
part of the winter at Indianapolis. 
ORO 
A garden party was held Wednesday afternoon at 
“Finisterre,” the estate of Mrs. John Clay at Eastern 
Point, Gloucester, in aid of the Red Cross fund. Mem- 
bers of the Gloucester citizens’ committee of the Inter- 
national Red Cross held a whist party at the Hawthorne 
Inn Casino Thursday afternoon, followed by a dance in 
the evening. Mrs. J. D. Randall-Maclver is the origi- 
nator of the plan to raise money in this way and is 
chairman of the general committee. Mrs. John Hays 
Hammond is the treasurer and honorary chairman and 
Mrs. George W. Woodbury is working chairman. 
Special Attention Given 
to Out-of-Town Orders. 
