NORTH SHORE BREEZE I: x 
We have received a full line of 
i THANKSGIVING SUPPLIES 
New Raisins for Table and Cooking, New Currants, New Nuts, Popping Corn, Table Apples, 
Cooking Apples. 
| THANKSGIVING SUPPLIES 
1 Quart Glass Jar 40c. 
C. B. & Y. Mince Meat, ready to use, unequalled in quality 
2 Quart Glass Jar 75c. 
Cc. B. & Y. SPECIAL THANKSGIVING MINCE PIES, large size, 22 cents each. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Miss Hope Norman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy 
Norman of Boston and Beverly Cove, is entertaining her 
friend, Miss Margaret Perrin, of Washington at the Nor- 
man Boston home. Miss Norman and Miss Perrin were 
much together at Washington during the winter that the 
-Normans spent there. 2 
Mrs. William H. Scudder closed her house at Mag- 
nolia Point last Friday, returning with her daughter, 
Miss Maud Scudder, to a eee at St. Louis. 
Mr. and Mrs. David S. Greenough of Boston and 
Eastern Point, Gloucester, presented their daughter, Mary, 
yesterday at a reception at their home at 12 South Street, 
Jamaica Plain. Miss Greenough is a member of the Sew- 
ing Circle. The Greenoughs have an attractive cottage 
at Eastern Point, known locally as the Black Bess cottage. 
x 9° 
Many North Bare *heovle: who have returned to 
their Boston homes, were noted in the audience at the 
Symphony rehearsal last Friday afternoon. Among them 
were Mrs. Henry L. Higginson, Mrs. Oliver Ames, 2d, 
and her daughter, Miss Olivia Ames, Mrs. Neal Rantoul, 
Mrs. James Jackson, Mrs. J. Brooks Fenno, Mrs. Francis 
L. Higginson, Mrs. Robert Stowé Bradley and her daugh- 
ter, Mrs. Roger W. Cutler, Mrs. Francis H. Peabody, 
Mrs. Randolph M. Appleton with her daughters, Miss 
‘Julia Appleton and Miss Sybil Appleton, Mrs. Winthrop 
Sargent, and Mrs. Charles K. Cummings. 
One of the most interesting as well as most practical 
charity events of the fall will be the entertainment, which 
is shortly to be given at the Exeter street theatre, Boston, 
to raise a fund for working girls who have been thrown 
out of employment in these hard times. Work on gar- 
ments for the Red Cross work will be furnished the 
girls, who will be paid for their time out of the fund. 
The Exeter street theatre has kindly contributed several 
moving picture films as well as its services. Miss Mary 
Fay and Mr. Seabury will be among those to entertain. 
Among the patronesses are Miss Susan Amory, Mrs. 
Walter C. Baylies, Mrs. I. Tucker Burr, Miss Rose Dex- 
ter, Mrs. Augustus Hemenway, Mrs. William Caleb Lor- 
ing, Mrs. Herbert Mason, Mrs. Neal Rantoul, Mrs. Au- 
gustus Thorndike. 
Oo 8 90 
Miss Laura Wick with her friend, Miss Loring, 
whom she has been visiting at Boston since Mrs. Wick 
returned to Youngstown, Ohio, about two weeks ago, 
spent Wednesday at the family’s summer home at Man- 
chester. 
COBB, BATES & YERXA CO. 
Essex and 
St. Peter Sts. 
SALEM, MASS. 
Miss Mary Sigourney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Henry Sigourney of Boston and Nahant, was presented 
to Boston society at a ball given in her honor at the 
Tuileries last Friday night. 
o 2 9 
Miss Marcia Taylor, who with her parents, Mr. and 
Mrs. Charles B. Taylor, is in Boston for the winter, spent 
Sunday at Manchester. 
o89 
In the Social Register of Boston for 1915, which 
has just been issued, the members of its prominent fami- 
lies, whether residing in the city, in the country or abroad, 
are grouped under the one address, with the maiden and 
Christian names of the married women, the names of the 
daughters and sons in the order of their age, and the 
younger children, from 12 to 20, appearing under the 
title of “Juniors.” The key to the married names of wo- 
men is still provided through the instrumentality of the 
“Married Maidens.” This year the scope of the Social 
Register has been increased to include Seattle and Port- 
land, Oregon, and Southern California, comprising Los 
Angeles and Pasadena, practically covering, with San 
Francisco, all of the Pacific Coast. There are noted the 
marriages in Boston of 153 persons as compared with 196 
last year; and the deaths of 50 women and 60 men as 
compared with 35 women and 50 men last year, an in- 
crease in the mortality and a marked decrease in the 
marriages. 
Card Tables, Folding Chairs, 
Gold Chairs 
Weddings, Teas 
Dances, Lawn Parties 
W. J. CREED 
Caterer 
PRIVATE WAITING 
Boston: Mass. Chambers BEVERLY COVE, MASS. 
Tel. 3040 Back Bay. Tel. 765 
Real Estate Service 
My endeavor is to so conduct the North 
Shore Real Estate Business as to earn the 
support of my clients. Any suggestions 
as to how I can better serve you will be 
fully considered. : : , 
D. A. McEACHERN 
11 Pleasant Street Gloucester 
TELEPHONE 161 M. 
2 
——— SS 
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