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July 23, 1915. 
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OACHAN 
16 West 56th Street New York 
IMPORTER of GOWNS 
WRAPS AND FURS 
AT THE FULLER COTTAGE 
LEXINGTON AVE. 
(OPPOSITE THE OCEANSIDE) 
MAGNOLIA 
TELEPHONE 8589 
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I nomonsotnosonomosoeowonONomoNSmeGne ono tS CHOHON aH tn aimee 
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Edith Longfellow Dana, wife of Richard Henry 
Dana, of Brattle street, Cambridge, and Manchester, died 
Wednesday in the historic old town of Lancaster. She 
was a daughter of the poet, Henry W. Longfellow, and 
her mother was his second wife, Frances Elizabeth Ap- 
pleton. Mrs. Dana was one of the three daughters of 
Mr. and Mrs. Longfellow. Mrs. Dana’s sisters are Miss 
Alice Longfellow, who still resides in her father’s historic 
home, Craigie House, Cambridge, and Mrs. James G. 
Thorpe, formerly Annie Allegra Longfellow, whose home 
adjoins that of the Dana family in Cambridge. Mrs. 
Dana had been in ill-health for some time, and last fall 
underwent a surgical operation from which she had not re- 
covered. She was married Jan. 10, 1878, to Richard Henry 
Dana, who, like herself, came of notable ancestry, and 
ever since their marriage they have lived in Cambridge, 
with a summer residence for many years at Manchester, 
where their place overlooks what is known as Dana’s 
Beach. In addition to her husband and her sisters, Miss 
Longfellow and Mrs. Thorpe, Mrs. Dana is survived by 
four sons and two daughters, as follows: Richard Henry 
Dana, Jr., of New York, Harvard 1901, who married 
Miss Ethel N. Smith; Henry W. Longfellow Dana, -H< ur 
vard 1903, Cambridge; Allston Dana, Harvard 1906, who 
married Miss Dorothy H. Goodale and who now lives 
in White Plains, N. Y., and Edmund Trowbridge Dana, 
who married Miss Jessie Holliday of England (whose 
death by drowning was a recent occurrence), and the 
two daughters are Mrs. Henry C. DeRham, 2d, of New 
York, who formerly was Miss Frances A. Dana, and Mrs. 
Robert H. Hutchinson of Philadelphia, who before her 
marriage was Miss Delia F. Dana. Ernest Wadsworth 
-Longfellow, the New York architect, who has a sumer 
home in Manchester, is a brother of Mrs. Dana.  An- 
other brother, Charles Appleton Longfellow, was a soldier 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 21 
eee 
| 
18 Hut, St., Boston 
The Paul Revere Pottery 
Corner Pine and Central Streets 
Manchester, Mass. 
(Manchester Tea Rooms) 
Can furnish you with breakfast, luncheon and din- 
ner sets of harmonious color and unique design, 
with monograms or names if desired. . Also bread 
tiles and candlesticks. 
and milk sets, flower vases, 
THE MANILA TRADING CO. 
Special Exhibit Week of July 25th 
The choicest selections for connoisseurs including 
rare embroideries, tapestries and brasses from 
China, Japan, India and Manila. 
Manchester Tea Rooms --- 4] Central Street 
Miss Etta OF_NEW YORK 
MARCEL WAVE, MANICGRING 
Scalp Treatment and Facial Massage 
The Bungalow Shop 
TELEPHONE 443 
Magnolia 
in the Civil War and lost his life in his services for his 
country. 
Oo 8% O° 
Miss Ingrid E. Akeson of Boston, the Swedish med- 
ical gymnast, who has been at Manchester for the last 
seven years, is located this year at Pride’s Crossing. Her 
telephone number is Beverly Farms 96, adv. 
o 8 0 
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P. 
House,” Beverly Cove, are entertaining 
I’ranklin Hobbs of Shrewsbury. 
“TLefavour 
and Mrs. 
Mandell of 
Mr. 
Oo 3, Oo 
Dr. and Mrs. John Mason of Montserrat gave a 
luncheon at the Puritan tea room, Tuesday, for their 
house guests from Rochester, N. Y. Mr and Mrs. Ben- 
jamin D. Shreve of Salem also gave a dinner for Mr. and 
Mrs. W. E. Worthy of Salem. 
o 8 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Barclay Henry of Philadelphia are 
among the late newcomers to Beverly Farms. Mrs. 
Henry is a sister to Mrs. Timothee Adamowski of West 
Manchester. 
Oo 8 O° 
Percy Grainger, the noted musician, 
at the home of Mrs F. L. Higginson, Jr., 
is a house guest 
Pride’s Crossing. 
H. Vickery of New York, ladies hair-dresser, 
is on the North Shore again this summer, and has with 
him the newest thing out in the line of permanent 
underlating apparatus for the permanent wave, Mr. 
Vickery was taught by the inventor of the machine 
Wim. 
and is endorsed by him. The complete apparatus 1s 
portable and Mr. Vickery thas already demonstrated the 
value and usefulness of the machine at many North 
Shore homes. His telephone is 142 Beverly Farms, 
