July 9, 1915. 
NOR ete HO Rib REEF hand Reminder 23 
Telephone 41-W. 
Carter & McCarthy, 
Awnings, Hammocks, Cushions 
and Spray Hoods. 
ELM ST., Opposite Roberis & Hoare’s Shop 
MANCHESTER. 
ESTIMATES GIVEN. 
Before Having Work Done Elsewhere See Us. 
REFERENCES FURNISHED. 
]F the enthusiasm and co-operation which are being shown 
by the organizers and friends of the coming 
Navy Y. M. C. A. festival at Beverly Farms are prop- 
erly backed up by the weather, then July 21st should 
prove a red letter day on the North Shore. In the 
first place, Miss Haven has given the use of her field, 
beautifully situated near the sea on West Street, 
within two minutes’ walk of the Beverly Farms sta- 
tion. Besides this, the United States Government, 
through the friendly medium of the Naval officials at 
the Charlestown Navy Yard, will send down a detach- 
ment of marines and bluejackets, with two marine 
bands, to take part in the entertainment. Last, but 
not least, the following ladies have undertaken the 
work of the various booths :— 
Mitiinery Bootu: Mrs George von. L. Meyer, Miss 
Julia Meyer, Mrs. Raymond Rodgers, Miss Julia Apple- 
ton, Miss Sybil Appleton, Mrs. James Parker, Jr., and 
Mrs. George von L. Meyer, Jr. 
FARM Propucts: Mrs. Walter D. Denegre, Mrs. 
Francis Meredyth Whitehouse, Mrs. James H. Proc- 
tor, Mrs. William H. Moore, and Mrs. Samuel A. Cul- 
bertson. 
TABLE AND Hovusenotp Urensits: Mrs. R. S. 
Bradley, Miss Helen Burnham, Mrs. C. FE. Cotting, 
Mrs. H. G. O. Colby, Mrs. George M. Cushing, Mrs: 
Edward L. Kent, Mrs. Gordon Prince and Mrs. John 
L. Thorndike. 
Frowers: Miss Margaret Thomas and Miss Helen 
Frick, managers; Miss Ella Snelling, Miss Ethel Cum- 
mings, Miss Eleanor Higginson, Miss Elizabeth Beal, 
Miss Pauline Fenno and Miss Ellen Curtis, flower 
girls. 
AFfreRNoon TEA: Mrs. Homer B. Richardson, Mrs. 
Boylston A. Beal, Mrs. R. Paul Snelling, Mrs. Timo- 
thée Adamowski and Mrs. Louis Bacon. 
CHILDREN’s Toys: Mrs. Harold J. Coolidge, Mrs. 
Francis L. Higginson, Jr., Mrs. Nathaniel S. Simpkins, 
Jr., and Miss Mary Curtis. 
SportinG CiotHEs:Miss Elise Ames, Miss Olivia 
Ames, Miss Grace Brooks and Miss Phyllis Sears. 
Basiges’ CrorHes: Mrs. C. M. Amory, Mrs. Reginald 
Boardman, Mrs. Quincy A. Shaw, 2nd, and Miss Lillian 
Mitchell. 
P1AzzA AND GARDEN AccEssorIES: Miss Evelyn R. 
Sturgis, Mrs. S. V. R. Crosby, Miss A. M. Sturgis, 
Mrs. Francis L. Higginson, Mrs. Neal Rantoul, Mrs. 
T. Jefferson Coolidge, Jr., and Mrs. J. A. Lowell Blake. 
Prttows AND Baas: Mrs. Hendricks H. Whitman. 
CANDY AND CAKE: Mrs. E. Laurence White. 
LAmpsHapves: Mrs, Augustus P. Gardner, 
Established 1845 Telephone 67 
SHELDON’S MARKET 
Ee ott Hooper, Manager 
Dealer in First-Class 
Provisions, Poultry, Game, Vegetables, etc. 
CENTRAL STREET, MANCHESTER 
PRIDE’S CROSSING BEVERLY FARMS MAGNOLIA 
Gras: Mrs. Livingstone Davis, Miss Teresa D. Weld 
and Miss Louisa Weld. 
BripcE: Mrs. Alfred ° Codman, 
Higginson and Mrs. Oliver Turner. 
In addition to the above, a number of young girls 
will act as waitresses under direction of Miss Elaine 
Denégre, and assistance of every sort is being given by 
the young men of the summer colony. The festival 
will last all day and there will be music, military drills, 
athletic contests, dancing, with tea in the afternoon 
and a cabaret in the evening,—besides the usual accom- 
paniment of booths and side shows. ‘The festival is 
being held to raise money for the.fund for the building 
which the Naval Y. M. C. A. hopes to build in the 
neighborhood of the Charlestown Navy Yard... The 
Navy Y. M. C. A. is an organization which provides 
occupation, recreation and friendly surroundings for 
sailors and marines of the U. S. Navy on shore leave, 
and has large and adequate establishments in the neigh- 
borhood of most of the Navy Yards of the country. 
It is national in its scope and is affiliated with, but not 
controlled by, the local Y. M. C. A. In Charlestown 
its equipment is woefully insufficient to meet the needs 
of a large and important navy yard, and the committee 
in charge of the Boston branch is raising funds for the 
necessary building. This committee consists of a 
number of well known Boston men among whom are 
Messrs. von L. Meyer, Charles K. Cummings, Charles 
M. Amory, Francis H. Appleton, Jr., Nathaniel Simp- 
kins, Jr., Dr. Marshal Fabyan and other residents of 
the North Shore. 
Mrs>--7C “Henry 
The sewing for the French Wounded Emergency 
cause will be thoroughly organized by another week at 
the Oceanside Annex, Magnolia. Nearly all of the ladies 
in the Magnolia colony turned out to the first meeting, 
Tuesday morning. In order to supply material a con- 
tribution of fifty cents a week is asked. The ladies are 
having a hard time in finding a sewing machine that can 
be donated for the summer. 
oO 8 O 
Brownland Cottages at Old Neck, Manchester, were 
the scene of much entertaining over the holiday. . Hon. 
Davis Cooke of Philadelphia came on with his daughter, 
Mrs. M. L. Cook, for the season. Miss Loring spent the 
week-end with her parents, the Thatcher Lorings, and has 
left with a party of friends for a two months’ trip to 
California. Miss Marion Greeley has spent the week in 
New York. The Misses Sohier entertained their niece, 
Miss Metcalf of the Theodore Metcalf family of Boston, 
over the holiday. Miss Gertrude White of Boston will 
come to her apartments at Brownlands, July 16, 
