18 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
MRS. BILL’?S SHOP 
G. W. BILL & CO. 
ON THE BEACH AT Magnolia 
TELEPHONE 550 
CHINESE AND JAPANESE ART 
SHANTUNG TABLES -- 
PORCH CHAIRS -- 
AFT ERIN@@Naic Es Anan nip 
OTHER FURNISHINGS 
ICE-CREAM FROM 83-6 
Entrance: Raymond St. or Lobster Lane 
‘jy Ht Peace Pageant on Septexber 17 and 18 on the 
MSntserrat Athletic field, in which 500 people fron 
Beverly will take part, will be one of the sum rer’s chief 
events. The pageant was given at Chatauqua Thursday, 
and is the same as was given in June at the Panama 
Exposition in the Court of Ages in connection with the 
Congress of Missions. Miss Colburn of Newton, who 
saw it in the west, will have charge of the drilling. Of 
the participants 1oo will be children. |The organizing 
committee met last Friday at the home of Mrs. Henry 
\V. Peabody in Montserrat, A committee of about 100 
members will soon have it in charge. Mayor Mac- 
donaid of Beverly is very much interested. ‘lhe pageant 
is for the benefit of the Beverly Y. M. C. A. and ‘its 
purpose 1s to show the beauty of peace, the sorrows of 
war and the possibility of peaceful and friendly rela- 
tions with all nations when Christian ideals shall prevail. 
The costuming, the music and scenes will be beautiful 
features and cannot help but impress the great lesson of 
the pageant. In the first scenes will be shown the spirits 
cf peace and war, the beginning of war, at the front and 
aiter the battle, all accorpanied with suitable songs and 
‘usic. Then will follow scenes showing the renowned 
distorical conquests of peace among which will be Wil- 
liam Penn and the Indians, Commodore Perry’s peace- 
ful entrance into Japan and many missionary scenes of 
noted conquests, The closing scenes will show volun- 
teers for peace, the friendship of the nations, and the 
Christian ideal of peace. In the friendship of the na- 
tions the children who take part will be in groups repre- 
senting twelve nationalities, ‘the forty-nine states and 
Columbia will be older girls. This wil be one of the 
most interesting scenes of the pageant. The songs that 
will be sung by the various. groups are all typical of the 
country represented and are catchy little airs. 
Hack and Hill Jun 
Lindall Hill, Danvers, Mass. 
20 miles from Boston—North Shore 
LITTLE INN for children of any age, with or 
without their parents. Desirable for week-ends, 
holidays, vacations; for convalescent rest in the 
country; when parents wish to rest quietly at home, 
take a short trip, or are opening their city honses. 
—Mrs. Rospert A. MACFApDDEN. 
Mrs. Henry W. Peabody of “Ledgewood,’ Moné- 
scirat, spent a tew days in New York tais week hiceting 
with the board of governors of the women’s college of 
Madras, India. Among her house-guests are Miss Con- 
verse, a retuined missionary from Japan, Mr. and Mrs. 
R. Stafford and son of Shanghai, China, Dr. and Mrs. 
Robert Stuart MacArthur of New York. Dr. Mac- 
Arthur is of Tremont Teuple. Mr. and Mrs. James 
Church Alvord have also been recent guests. Mr, Al- 
vord is the author of.“The Iron Cross,” the prize peace 
story published this summer by the Christian Wo nen’s - 
Peace Movement. 
PAROS! KS 
Mrs. Charles Ober of Beverly gave a luncheon of 
six covers Saturday at the Elizabeth-Martha T Shop in 
henor of Miss Nettie Woodberry of Beverly Cove, It 
was a birthday party and a dainty seven-course luncheon 
was served. Pink sweet peas were the decorations. 
Oo 2.6 
Beverly Inn, Beverly, arrivals for late August 
iiclude Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Frazier and the Misses 
Frazier of New York; Mrs. S. W. Ladd, Harry C. 
Waters, Boston; Miss Marjory Gammons, Ash‘and, N. 
Ee 
o 8 0 
Mrs. Bill’s shop and tea room in Magnolia is a 
favorite place for Oceanside young people these days. 
From her piazza, where the Japanese tea tables are spread, 
a fine view of the water is seen, which is especially 
interesting at sunset. Frequenters of the tea room this 
sum'rer have been Miss Elizabeth Houghton, Miss Thorn- 
ton of the Magnolia colony, Mrs. William Baxter Closson 
of Newtonville, Miss Gallaudette of Hartford, Conn., and 
Mrs. T. Harrison Garrett of Baltimore, who surmers at 
Fockport in the Land’s End colony. 
COO 7 
Lake Pearl Auto Club Inn 
Wrentham, Mass. 
CHICKEN 
LOBSTER 
STEAK 
DUCKLING 
LOG) NG PN Scie 
Red Indian Spring Water used on all our tables, 
used since 1635. Recommended by some of the 
leading physcians in the State. 
Fishing, Boating, Canoeing and Dancing 
TrEL. WRENTHAM 8007 
——S—S————————eeEeETET———eeee 
August 27, 1915, 
—a 
es 
