August 6, 1915. 
Telephone 
260 Beverly 
Grocery, Bakery, Meat, 
Fish, Dairy, Fruit and 
’ Vegetable Departments. 
MARSTON-STURTEVANT CO. 
278 CABOT ST., BEVERLY 
The Complete Food Store 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 13 
| 
Telephone 
260 Beverly 
Each Department 
under 
Competent Management. 
THE Sanitary Food Store of the North Shore 
—Modern Refrigerating—All Meats, Fish, 
Fruits and Vegetables under glass protection. 
VERYTHING in the Food line of the Very 
Best Quality. All goods in oe PAG 
ment are from our own ovens. : 
YAO HTS SUPE LLED PROMPTLY 
The store of Cleanliness—The store of Quality—The store of Full Values—The store of Right Prices. 
Closed Wednesday Afternoons. 
If one wishes to see one of the most charming littie 
spots on the North Shore he should see ‘“Pompey’s 
Garden,” the home of Mr. and Mrs. Quincy A. Shaw xt 
Pride’s Crossing. The little Italian garden is hidden far 
away from Hale st., up among the trees and rocks, and 
the visitor who accidently discovers it and sees it for 
the first time is amazed at the beauty of the little place. 
It is surrounded by a stone wall covered with ivy and 
roses with a pretty little stone fountain at one side. A 
lily pond wreathed with flowers forms the center, and 
“many sweet-scented flowers and ferns make this an ideal 
piace. At one end of the garden is a quaint little stone 
tea house which looks very inviting. Near the tea house 
is a stone stairway descending from the garden to the 
lawns and beach near the house. Bowlders of immense 
size are seen on the rocky hillside near the garden. ‘The 
trees, the great rocks, the abundance of ferns and other 
weodsy plants outside the garden, and. the fascinating 
view of the sea from the garden steps cannot but make 
one want to linger long in “Pompey’s Garden” with its 
charming old- motid suggestions. 
OFS3O 
Miss Ingrid FE. 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 Crossiny. Her 
telephone number is Beverly Farms 96. adv. 
ioe S © TUG: TK @ 
Manchester ‘ea Rooms are looking very cool and 
inviting now in the new quarters. A tempting array of 
fruits and jellies are for sale as well as the delicious 
cakes for which the place is noted. The Pau] Revere 
pottery shop connected with the rooms has a beautiful 
display of hand-wrought bowls, vases, jars, breakfast, 
luncheon and dinner sets, bread and milk sets, tiles and 
candlesticks. 
G5 O 
Miss Cornelia Carney of New York is the guest of 
her aunt, Mrs. F. A. Carney of Hotel Aborn, Magnolia. 
oO 8 O 
Miss Helen Covel of the Aborn, Magnolia, was join- 
ed this week by her sister, Miss Abbey Covel, who has 
returned from Silver Bay conference, which she attended 
as a,Y. W. C. A. delegate. 
“AT THE SIGN OF THE MARBLE FAUN” 
=--TEA ROOM--- 
393 ESSEX STREET, SALEM 
Open week-days, excepting Saturdays and holidays 
from 3.30 to 5.30 p. m. No luncheons served. 
House Built in 1740 
We Invite Inspection. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fulton Cutting. (Mary Amory) are 
spending the summer with Mrs. Cutting’s father, Francis 
Amory of Beverly Cove. The Cuttings have return- 
el this week from a short trip through New Hampshire 
and Vermont. 
Oo 8 O 
The North Shore colony will be well represented at 
the military training camp conducted by the U. S. gov- 
ernment at Plattsburg, N. Y., Aug. 10 to Sept. 6. Among 
those enrolling are Charles C. Walker, Lawrence Hemen- 
way, Henry S. Grew, Randolph Grew, Reginald C. Fos- 
ter, J. W. Farley, Manchester; Geo. H. Lyman, Jr., Bev- 
erly Farms; Fred H. Prince, Harcourt Amory, Pride's 
Crossing; John L,. Saltonstall, Beverly Cove; John C. 
Phillips, North Beverly; Bayard Tuckerman, Jr., James 
H. Proctor, Ipswich; Charles W. ‘Taintor, Topsfield; 
Alanson L. Daniels, Wenham; James Jackson Cabot of 
Boston and Beverly Farms, who has been living in Vir- 
ginia of late. 
Oo % O 
The Sign of the Crane tea room, Manchester, has 
had among its teas and luncheons this week a small lun- 
cheon given by Miss Edith Fabyan of West Manchester ; 
Mrs. R. M. Hibbard of Kansas City, party of four; Mr. 
and Mrs. W. S. Baillie of Edinburgh, Scotland, party of 
three; Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Weir of Pittsburgh, eight; 
Mrs. Atherton Brown, three. 
Agencies at 
NEW YORK 
CHICAGO 
PHILADELPHIA 
PITTSBURG 
INDIANAPOLIS 
KANSAS CITY 
LOUISVILLE 
HARTFORD 
NEW HAVEN 
YONKERS, N. Y. 
| Zhis FOUNTAINabsolictoly 
I Zemoves all impurities) 
|UNGLAZED 
| POROUS 
SPRINGFIELD 
| ENDORSE ITA) WORCESTER 
We lease and care for hem” PROVIDENCE, R. Lf. 
RITE FOR_2 4 
CATALOG TO | ORANGE, N. J. 
GUANAJUATO 
Mexico 
[BOSTON FILTER COMPANY] 
CHELSEA. MASS. U.S. A. 
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