2 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
GOODS = 
COLLECTED 
TUESDAYS 
DELIVERED 
FRIDAYS 
C 
BRANCH 
OFFICES AT 
Durgin, Jacobs Co., 218 Cabot St., Beverly 
Mrs. Bennett, 3 Lexington Row, Magnolia 
The Oceanside Hotel, “‘Desk’’ Magnolia 
ba! 
bese ich el i 
GOODS 
COLLECTED 
FRIDAYS 
DELIVERED 
TUESDAYS 
Miss Douglas, 123 Main St., Gloucester 
Miss Lethbridge, 3 Beach St., Manchester 
Everybody on the North Shore is taking a lively inter- 
est in the bridge tournament and sale for the benefit of 
the “Red Cross,” to be held on Tuesday afternoon, Octo- 
ber 6th, at Mrs. Robert S. Bradley’s, Pride’s Crossing. 
Announcement is made that the benefit will be held 
even if rainy, in which case the sale will be held in the 
large coach-house of the stable, and the bridge tournament 
in the Bradley residence, of course. As an additional 
feature the committee announces that the Beverly Farms 
band has kindly consented to play during the afternoon, 
in some part of the estate not to interfere with the card- 
playing. Everything points to the affair being a huge 
success. 
Oo 3% 
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Hunnewell and their chil- 
dren, will close their cottage at Marblehead Neck and 
return to their Boston residence, 14 Chestnut st., early 
in October. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund H. Talbot, who have 
spent the summer at Marblehead Neck, will return to 
176 Bay State road, Boston, about the middle of October. 
ou 0 
Mr. and Mrs. Colville tay who are occupying 
the S. Parker Bremer cottage at Gales Point, Manchester, 
plan to remain there until the middle of October. Mr. 
Barclay, who was charge d’affaires of the English Em- 
bassy through the greater part of the summer, now passes 
most of his time in Washington, coming to Manchester 
for week-ends. 
o 8 O° 
Mr. and Mrs. Prescott Bigelow are making a return 
visit with Mr. and Mrs. George Barnard at their Ipswich 
home, coming down from their place at Fitzwilliam, N. 
H., in time for the Sargent-Lee wedding at Beverly 
Farms tomorrow. a 
a9 
The dance and bridge tournament to be given at the 
Essex County club, tonight, by the Beverly Hospital 
Junior Aid association, will be one of the smartest occa- 
sions of the late season on the North Shore. Miss Kath- 
erine Tweed, the president, and the Misses Alice Thorn- 
dike, Phyllis Sears, Katherine Putnam and Julia Meyer, 
with Charles EF. Cotting, Jr., and Dudley L. Pickman, Jr., 
the other officers, have been working night and day for 
‘ts success. About 200 are expected to attend. 
Only thoroughly trained 
competent servants (male 
or female) supplied. Re- 
ferences personally and care- 
fully investigated. 
MISS WILD 
Registry ©ffice 
30S Fifth Ave., N. E. Cor. 3ist., N. Y. 
Telephones 8822, 8823 Madison Square 
J. Pierpont Morgan’s palatial yacht the Corsair drop- 
ped anchor in Manchester harbor the first of the week 
while Mr. Morgan and his son Junius Morgan and the 
latter’s fiancee Miss Converse visited Mrs. H. S. Grew 
and others of Mrs. Morgan’s relatives at Manchester. 
Mrs. Morgan (Jane N. Grew) is still in Europe. 
3 O° 
Several social functions enlivened the closing season 
at Magnolia last week in. connection with the Buck- 
Dutcher wedding Saturday, which was one of the prettiest 
weddings of the season on the North Shore. On Thurs- 
day night Mrs. Pierpont Dutcher, in honor of the house 
party at the Dutcher cottage, gave a picnic.and lobster 
bake on the beach, followed by dancing at the Coolidge 
bungalow. Some thirty young people attended this and 
had a most glorious time. At the North Shore Grill 
Friday evening a dinner-of sixteen covers was given for ~ 
the bridal party followed by dancing. 
o % 
An effort has been made to bring to the. North 
Shore for a meeting at some public place, probably in the 
Manchester Town hall, Mme. Vandervelde, wife of 
Minister of State Amil Vandervelde, one of King Albert’s 
envoys to President Wilson. Mme. Vandervelde has 
come to America to solicit aid on behalf of the Belgian 
children and widows, whose fathers have been killed in 
the war. Queen Mary of England received Mme. Van- 
dervelde a day or two before her departure from Eng- 
land for this country and expressed her heartfelt sym- 
pathy on behalf of the Belgian children and widows. 
The welcome that Mrs. Vandervelde received at the 
hands of the English people shows that nothing could be 
more practical or more touching than- her mission. She 
hopes and believes that the American people will follow 
the example of Queen Mary and the English. 
Prominent among the debutantes of the winter will 
be Miss Frances Bradley, the youngest of the three 
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stow Bradley, of the 
Pride’s colony. The largest entertainments in her honor 
will be two dances at the spacious Commonwealth ave- 
nue home, Boston, the dates of which have not been 
definitely set. 
Special Attention Given 
to Out-of-Town Orders. 
= 
‘ 
