4 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Hydrangeas, Box Trees, 
Bay Trees.« Tender Plants 
Cared for During the Winter 
Now is the time to plant the following to bloom 
next season: 
ParonrEs—new French large flowering sorts. 
LARKspuRS—large plants, my own hybrids. 
PuLox—best varieties. 
SHaAstA Dartsy—large flowering. 
CAMPANNIA—Canterbury Bells, 3 colors. 
FoxcLovE—pink and white 
GAILARDIA, 
SWEET WiLL1iAM—pink and white. 
For Cur Frowrers we have CHRYSANTHEMUMS, 
CARNATIONS and PINK SNAP DRAGONS. 
Boston Ferns, Chrysanthemums and Cyclamen in 
Pots. 
Our Prices are Reasonable. 
RALPH W. WARD 
Beverly’s Leading Florist 
Cross St., near Beverly Cove School. Beverly Tel.757w 
SOCIETY NOTES 
It was with surprise last Saturday that friends of 
Spencer P. Kennard of Boston and Miss Madeline M. 
White of Lowell learned that unknown to their parents, 
they had been quitely married in Boston the previous day. 
After receiving the forgiveness of their parents the couple 
left on their honeymoon trip to New York. Mr. Kennard 
is 22, and his bride will be 20 next week. Mr. Kennard 
is a son of Mrs. Delphine Hills, with whom he made his 
home. He is a nephew of Arthur W. Kennard of 467 
Beacon st., a member of the jewelry firm of Hodgson, 
Kennard & Co., of 25 State st., and Magnolia. His bride 
is the daughter of William T. White, head of the Amer- 
ican Hide and Leather Company’s works in Lowell. For 
a month the bride’s parents have lived in the Back Bay. 
Relatives of the couple Saturday declined to say where the 
wedding was performed, but they admitted it took place 
Friday in Boston. Both Mr. and Mrs. Kennard are well 
and favorably known on the North Shore, where both are 
leaders in the coterie of young people at the Oceanside, 
Magnolia, and all of its many and varied activities. Mrs. 
Kennard was considered one of the most attrtctive girls 
at the Oceanside for the last two or three years. 
o #9 
The S. V. R. Crosbys are concluding their stay at 
West Manchester this week and are returning to their 
winter home in Boston. They will pay occasional visits 
to the shore during the winter as usual, especially during 
the Thanksgiving and Christmas holiadys. 
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The summer home of Mr. and Mrs. William Phillips 
at North Beverly has been closed and-Mrs. Phillips has 
gone on to Washington to join Mr. Phillips, who has 
been there for some weeks. He is one of the Assistant 
Secretaries of State. 
The Bernard C. Welds and.the R. S. Reynolds Hitts, 
of Boston and Washington, respectively, are among the 
week’s departure from aes Farms. 
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Barr have gone to their 
country house in New Ipswich, N. H., for November, 
after a short stay at the Copley-Plaza, where they went 
after a visit at Morristown, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. Lan- ~ 
don Humphreys, the latter Mrs. Barr’s daughter, have 
taken the Gilbert Potts house in Morristown, which is 
near the fine estate of Ps Bune father. 
The Chas. W. Joneses have closed their Magnolia” 
house and are settled at 455 Beacon st., Boston, for the 
winter. ! 
o9 
ry 
Edwin A. Boardman and family, who have made 
their year-round home at Beverly Farms for several years, 
are to live in Boston this winter. They closed their cot- 
tage on West st., Mgneay: 
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4 
The Neal Rantouls of Boston are among the de- 
partures from Beverly Farms this week. 
Mrs. James H. Beal has re-opened her Boston house — 
on Beacon street, after spending the season at Nahant. 
Mrs. Beal’s summer place is one of the most attractive on _ 
Nahant Road. 
ORB O 
Rear Admiral and (Mrs. W. H. H. Sutherland, who 
spent the season at Nahant, have returned to their house 
on N street at Washington for the winter. Their son-in- 
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bacon, who have 
also been at Nahant this season at the Ely cottage, have 
returned to Boston. 
o2 9 
Rev. William Wood of New York and Ipswich is 
taking a course of study at Oxford University this year. 
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Chalmers Wood, who 
have “Brier Hill,’ one of the most attractive places at 
Ipswich. 
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Many North Shore people were seen in the large 
audience which greeted Dr. Karl Muck and the Boston 
Symphony orchestra so enthusiastically at the first of the: 
winter rehearsals last Friday afternoon, which opened the 
34th season of the splendid work of this orchestra. 
Among the North Shore patrons were Major and Mrs. 
Henry L. Higginson of West Manchester; Mrs. Win- 
throp Sargent, Rockport; Mrs. Francis H. Peabody of 
Beverly Cove; Mrs. Russell S. Codman and son, Charles 
R. Codman, Manchester; Mrs. Charles E. Cotting, West 
Manchester; Mrs. Roger W. Cutler, Pride’s Crossing; 
Mrs. Gordon Abbott, West Manchester; Mrs. Harold 
Coolidge, Pride’s Crossing; Mrs. Francis L. Higginson, 
Jr., Miss Juliet Higginson, Pride’s Crossing; Miss Fanny 
M. Faulkner, Magnolia; Miss Mary Curtis, Pride’s Cross- 
ing; Mrs. John L. Thorndike, West Manchester; Mrs. 
Samuel J. Mixter, Swampscott; Mrs. Augustus Hemen- 
way of Manchester, and Mr. Wallace Goodrich of West 
Manchester. Today at Symphony hall Dr. Muck and 
his orchestra will play Mozart’s ‘Masonic Funeral 
March” in memory of the late Gardiner Martin Lane of 
Boston and Manchester. Mr. Lane was a genuine music 
lover and through his membership in the firm of Lee, 
Higginson & Co. he was intimately associated with Major 
Henry L. Higginson of West Manchester, to whom Bos- 
ton music lovers owe so much. 
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Yearly subscription to North Shore Breeze, $2.00, 
