SE ee | kee ae 
August 6, 1915. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 39 
New York 
Philadelphia 
ESTABLISHED 86 YEARS 
IN AMERICA 
Boston 
LARGEST 
CAINE RS 
Collection and Delivery by Motors on the North Shore 
WORK RETURNED IN A FEW D.-YS 
SALEM ‘SHOP 
187 Essex. STREET 
PHONE 1800 SALEN 
LEWANDOS 
Be gd ON a ee 
2g SNS hip 0 SE) Sd Sg oe) 
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 
MAGNOLIA SHOP 
Fostrer’s PHARMACY KLDG. 
PHONE 401 MAGNOLIA | 
N. Y.; John H. Aldne, Boston; McKey Van Vleet, James 
Falls, M. Dinscomb, Memphis, Tenn.; Miss E. 1,. Lyons, 
Miss Mary Lyons, Miss Grace Lyons, Baltimore, Md.; 
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett A. Hobart, Miss Marie Thorne, 
Fatterson, N. J.; Mrs. George Quincy Clifford, Biockton ; 
J. R. Woodward, M. L. Madden, C. J. Madden, C. C. 
Buckley, Boston; Miss Doris McArdle, Belmont; Mrs. 
Frederick Beebe, Malden; Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Zell, Balti- 
more, Miss Rae Poulson, Toledo; Mr. and Mrs. J. H. 
McMurdy, New York city; Miss Crosby, Mrs. W. a. 
Reed, Jr., Brewster, N: Y.; Mrs. E. L. Shipman, Miss 
Catherine Shipman, Dr. and Mrs. R. H. McConnell, New 
York City; Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Allen, Miss Marjorie 
Bostick, Orange, N. J.; Miss Blanche Watson, Brookline ; 
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bunker, Miss Lysbeth Bunker, Yon- 
kers, N. Y.; Miss A. M. Fosdick, Brookline; Mr. and 
Mrs. T. P. Howard, Montreal; Mrs. J. W. Carey, Miss 
Carey, Dr. George W. Wilson, Miss Mary Purcell, Ei d- 
ward W. Purcell, Miss Annie A. Long, St. Louis; Mr. 
W. A. Hamilton, New York City; Mrs. 5. G. Smith, Mrs. 
H. L. Pilkington, St. Paul; Mrs. M. A. Johnson, Syra- 
cise, N Y.; Mrs. J. William Bailey, Middletown, Ct.; 
Miss E. C. Page, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Rice, Miss 
Mabel 'T. Rice, Miss Mary K. Rice, Boston; Miss E. A. 
Sawyer, Portland, Me.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Bennett; 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Stelle. 
Piper & Storer, gown shop, 86 Puritan road, Swamp- 
scott. Phone Conn. adv. 
Puritan Tea Room, Montserrat. Luncheons. Thurs- 
day specialties. Mrs. FE. A. Manning. Tel. 782-W Bev. adv. 
The Beach Bluff, Swampscott, railroad station of the 
Boston & Maine is being generally remodeled, making a 
needed improvement to this section of the resort town. 
Aockefellers 
Jo* Cigars 
LARGER AND BETTER THAN THE 
BEST YOU EVER SMOKED AT 
3*for 25c 
These and others of our well known brands can be had at the cigar stands 
in North Shore hotels and clubs 
WAMPSCOTT refuses to believe that the sumer is 
anywhere near over. Like the majority of. folks who 
stay on the North Shore as long as they can, Swamp- 
scottites are ready for at least six weeks’ more enjoyment 
on the upper shore, there to make 156 of 
pastimes which this section affords tourists and those 
who have their own cottage for the summer. 
The big event this week on the Swa «pscott shore— 
and for the season, for that matter—was the vid-summer 
ball at the Tedesco Country club on Wednesday evening. 
This was an occasion where everyone on the upper bend 
of the shore turned out and there were practica ly a thou- 
sand guests of the club that evening. Everything went 
off according to schedule and it was termed the most suc- 
cessful of any of the mid-summer dances ever held at the 
Tedesco—and they have been held for the past four 
seasons. 
The clubhouse was a scene of rare brilliancy. The 
decorations were most complete and beautiful. Flowers 
without number were strewn in profusion about every 
nook and cranny of the house and verandas; myriads of 
vari-colored electric bulbs cast their soft iridescence about 
the golf course which loomed up in the darkness back of 
the clubhouse. Everywhere there was activity. Hun- 
dreds of motors throbbed impatiently to unload their 
never-ending chain of gay revellers and sent the rays of 
their searchlights beaming along the roads. 
Everywhere there was gaiety and good nature in 
the throng that danced along the verandas and through 
the interior of the clubhouse. There was a never-ending 
battle of music. In a tent overlooking the-rear veranda 
was the Salem Cadet band. When toe bend c:ated play- 
ing a dance number Sharpe’s orchestra of Boston, en- 
larged for the occasion, caught up a different air and the 
dancers hardly paused for breath—and—danced some 
, 
te nym herleas 
‘Sprague, Breed, | 
Stevens and 
Newhall, Inc. 
Choicest Grades of 
Anthracite and Bituminous 
COALS 
No. 8 Central Square LYNN 
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