July 23, 1915, 
Telephone 41-W. | 
Carter & McCarthy, 
Awnings, Hammocks, Cushions 
and Spray Hoods. 
ELM S8T., Opposite Roberis & Hoare’s Shop 
MANCHESTER. 
REFERENCES FURNISHED. 
ESTIMATES GIVEN. 
Before Having Work Done Elsewhere See Us. 
ITH autos filling every available nook and with the ap- 
proach softly lighted with Japanese lanterns, the Navy 
Festival of Wednesday closed with one of the most bril- 
liant cabaret scenes in the history of the North Shore. 
The cabaret managers were Francis H. Appleton, Jr., and 
Miss Alice Thorndike. Music was furnished by the 
orchestra of the U. S. S. New Jersey. Sig. R. A. For- 
nari, formerly of the Boston Opera, received a cordial 
welcome in his Neapolitan songs, which he gave so admir- 
ably. Much amusement was created by “Mistah Sea- 
bury” in his black and white performance. Miss Doro- 
thy Jordan, in her incomparable manner, gave the skating 
dance. She was assisted by Miss Mabel Going. Miss 
Jordan looked exceedingly charming in her quaint 1839 
skating costume, with the immense plaid hoop-skirt, fancy 
jacket and jaunty little fur-trimmed cap The entertain- 
ment closed with “Little Lottie’s Revenge” and ‘Pathos 
Weekly in Three Reels,” by Messrs. Benchley, Squire & 
Co. The pavilion was guarded‘by a marine corps of 100 
men. About fifty tables were occupied by. friends and 
subscribers to the festival. The young girls acting as 
waitresses looked very attractive as they so cheerfully 
and quickly waited upon their guests. Miss Elaine 
Denegre was head waitress and her corps of assistants 
were the Misses Caroline Fessenden, Anne Means, Kath- 
erine Meeker, Frances Bradley. Ruth Paine, Eleanor 
Fabyan, Marie Agassiz, Ellen Curtis, Frances Hoar, Har- 
riet Fessenden, Hope Bancroft, Grace Meeker, Elizabetii 
Paine, Rosamond Eliot, Edith Fabyan, Anna Agassiz, 
Emma Mandell and Eleanor Cole. Three of the wait- 
resses, the Misses Means, Bradley and Agassiz will be 
among the bridesmaids tomorrow in the Minot-Gardner 
wedding. Dinner parties were given in many of the 
North Shore homes, the guests making up the cabarct 
parties later. Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Higginson gave a din- 
ner of twenty-six covers. Among their guests were Miss 
Minnie Ames, Miss Mary Ames, William Richardson of 
Nahant, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leland, Mr. and Mrs.,F. L. 
Higginson, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Bernard C. Weld, Miss 
Mary Curtis and J. Torrey Morse. Mr. and Mrs. Frank 
B» Bemis, Mr. and.Mrs Bryce J. Allan, Mr. and Mrs. 
Henry C. Frick and Mrs. Franklin Haven were among 
those who held dinner parties in their homes and had 
cabaret guests. Mrs. L. M. Sargent’s cabaret guests 
were Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Newbold, Miss Dumaine and 
Clarence S. Waugh of New York. At the Oliver Ames 
table were Miss Bullard, Miss Brooks and the Messrs. 
Ames The J. L. Thorndike guests were Mr. and Mrs. 
George Lyman and Mr. and M:s. Augustus N. Rantoul. 
Among Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Bradley’s guests were Mrs. 
Gordon Prince, Miss Helen Burnham and Miss Frances 
Bradley’s house-guests, the Misses Doris Taylor and 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder air 
Established 1845 Telephone 67 
SHELDON’S MARKET 
H. F. Hooper, Manager 
Dealer in First-Class 
Provisions, Poultry, Game, Vegetables, etc. 
CENTRAL STREET, MANCHESTER 
PRIDE’S CROSSING BEVERLY FARMS MAGNOLIA 
Caroline Ogden Jones. Among Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. 
Denegre’s guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Amory and 
a party of young folk Mr. and Mrs. Eben D. Jordan's 
guests were Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sheppard, Park- 
man Haven and Mr. Roth. Mrs. Louis Bacon was over 
from Nahant and among her guests were noted the F. B. 
Crowinshields. Charles Gibson of Nahant was one of 
the guests at Mrs. George Lee’s table. The Swampscott 
and Marblehead colonies were well represented. Among 
others who had tables were Miss Haven, Mrs. Alexander 
Cochrane, Mrs. Graeme Haughton, Mrs Lester Leland, 
Mrs. Charles K. Cummings, Mrs. Harold J. Cool- 
idge, Mrs. C. M. Amory, Mrs. R. M.. Agassiz, Mrs. 
Philip Dexter, Marshall Fabyan, Mrs. William Moore, 
George S. Mandell, Mrs. F. H. Appleton, P. S. Sears, C. 
C Walker, Mrs. W. Ross, T. B. Gannett, Miss. K. W. 
Tweed, Mrs. F. Cutting, Mrs. George von L. Meyer, Mrs. 
Q. A. Shaw, Jr., Dr. J. H. Lancashire, Mrs. Charles B. 
Pike, Mrs. H. White, George W. Warren, C. E. Cotting, 
Mrs. F. H. Prince, Mrs. I. R. Thomas, Mrs. Boylston A. 
Beal, Mrs. Livingston Davis, Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge, 
Mrs. James H. Proctor, Mrs Q. A. Shaw, 2nd, and Mrs. 
C. H. Clark. The punch and serving table was in charge 
of Mrs. Homer B. Richardson, Mrs. Boylston A. Beal, 
Mrs. R. Paul Snelling, Mrs. Timothee Adamowski 
Oo 8 9 
Green Gables is offering tonight at its second dinner- 
dance an exceptionally fine program. Miss Helene F. 
Bartlett, a noted young American dancer, who has recently 
returned from abroad, will give exhibition dancing, and 
Miss Melba Proctor and Paul Jones Chute, the regular 
artists of Green Gables this summer, will give modern and 
classique dances. General dancing will be a feature. The 
last dinner-dance was a great success. The ‘kiddies’ ” 
Tuesday afternoon party with costume dances was an 
enjoyable affair as usual. 
Or SSdLO 
Miss Frances Starr, the famous actress, has been 
spending a week on the North Shore, a guest of the Dr. 
J. H. Lancashires at their summer home in Manchester. 
She left the first of this week for Lake George to spend 
the balance of the summer. Mrs. J. Robinson Duff of 
Paris and Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Knowlton of Saginaw, 
Mich., are guests of the Lancashires this week. Miss 
Lila Lancashire is in Saginaw visiting some of her young 
friends for a week or so. : 
OF. 290 
The cups offered by Washington B. Thomas in the 
tug-of-war and obstacle race at the Navy Festival went 
to J. A. Insburger, J. V. Donnelly and G. L. McCleave: 
Miss Josephine Rantoul presented the victorious men 
with the handsome loving cups, 
