6 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
How About YOUR Watch 
It is a fact that most watches do not get the care that is essential to a 
long life and good time keeping— namely, cleaning and a drop of 
fresh oil every two years. 
If you own a good watch it will pay you in the end to take care of it, 
to spend a small sum on it every couple of years, rather than to let it 
run until it wears itself out. And a watch that is compelled to run 
on dry bearings will soon be ruined as a time keeper. 
Reso: THOMPSON, Jeweler 
164 Main Street - Gloucester, Mass. 
Axel Magnuson 
FLORIST and LANDSCAPE GARDENER 
BRIDGE STREET, oSe oS. MANOHESTER. 
GHRYSANTHEMUMS 
Carnations and Violets, Flowering Plants 
Telephone 172-2 
A. H. Higginson, Pres. W. B. Oalderwood, Supt. O. W. McGuire, Treas. 
DAVID FENTON CoO, Manchester-by-the-Sea 
MASS. 
Marine Railways, Boat Builders 
Paints, Oils, Varnish, Cordage, and all kinds of Hardware constantly on hand 
Yacht and Boat Repairing of every description, Yacht Tenders always in stock 
Boats stored for the Winter. We carry everything appertaining to the equip- 
mentof Launches. Spray Heods Made to Order Boats hauled on our railways, 
TELEPHONE 254 MANCMESTER 
towed in and out of channel, free of charge. 
D. D. CAREY 
Insurance Broker 
North Shore Property a Specialty 
56 AMES BLDG. BOSTON 
Tel. 1792 Main 
OSTEOPATHY 
Chronic and Nervous Diseases 
a specialty 
Dr. J. Oliver Sartwell 
Dr. Blanche B. Sartwell 
221 ESSEX ST. SALEM, MASS. 
OUR WE 
CLEANSING SYSTEM FOR YOUR 
FAMILY ASSORTMENT OF 
CLOTHES DURING THE SUMMER 
MONTHS AT LEAST. 
Every lot of clothes received is given a 
thorough purity cleansing in a separate wash- 
W J CREED er. Clothes called for, cleansed, the water 
hare extracted and the lot promptly returned for 
* CATERER # 
6Oc. 
And Private Waiting 
Treatments at home or office 
Residence Phone Danvers 298W 
THE SALEM LAUNDRY 
Telephone 1340 Salem 
Dunn's and Knight's Expresses, Agents 
EAST CORNING STREET 
BEVERLY COVE, MASS. 
Telephone 765 Beverly 
Everybody has to hustle; 
the egg is compelled to scramble, 
oftentimes, 
even 
SOCIETY NOTES 
New England men among the 40 
immortals of America, who summer 
and have summered on the North 
Shore inelude Senator Henry Cabot 
Lodge, senior Representative from 
Massachusetts.in. the national Upper 
House, a summer resident of Na- 
hant, and father of Mrs. A. P. 
Gardner of Washington and Ham- 
ilton. Senator Lodge, as a lecturer, 
editor, essayist and writer in gen- 
eral, ranks high as a_ litterateur. 
Among his works are ‘‘The Life and 
Letters of George Cabot,’’ ‘‘Short 
History of the English Colonies in 
America,’’ ‘‘Hero Tales from Amer- 
ican History,’’ in which former 
President Theodore Roosevelt  col- 
laborated; ‘‘Story of the Spanish 
War,’’ ‘‘History of Boston’’ and 
many essays. Rocky Neck, East 
Gloucester has entertained two of 
the immortals, George Cable, at the 
Pilgrim. House, and. George De 
Forest Brush of Dublin, N. H., a 
Tennesseean by birth. Mr. Brush 
and family occupied one summer the 
cottage now owned by the Misses 
Lathrop of Long Island. George 
W. Cable, the noted author of 
Southern stories, who now resides in 
Northampton, is thus signally hon- 
ored. Mr. Cable’s literary career 
began when he was a reporter on 
the New Orleans Picayune. He 
later wrote stories for Scribner’s 
monthly. Since 1879 he has devoted 
his efforts to literature. In 1887 he 
founded the Home-Culture clubs, a 
series of small clubs to promote 
more cordial relations between di- 
vergent ranks of society. ‘‘Old 
Creole Days,’’ ‘‘Madame Delphine,’’ 
‘““The Silent South,’’ ‘‘The Negro 
Question’’ and ‘‘The Cavalier’’ are 
some’ of his best known works. 
George de Forest Brush of Dublin, 
N. H., one of the 40 immortals, was 
selected in the department of art. 
Mr. Brush has won many prizes and 
medals with his pictures. Among 
his famous ones are ‘‘The Artist’’ 
and ‘‘The Mother and Child.’’ He 
has shown at the exposition in Chi- 
eago, Buffalo and St. Louis, at 
which he was awarded medals. Mr. 
Brush “was born Sept. 28, 1855. 
oe 0% % 
ve oe ve 
Miss Maud Kent Gorton of Provi- 
dence and M. Maurice Dimond of 
Boston, who spent last season at 
Magnolia, were married at high 
noon in Providence, Saturday. The 
ceremony was performed in the rec- 
tory of the fashionable All Saints’ 
Memorial church. Mr. Dimond has 
figured prominently as a_ horse- 
show exhibitor in New York, New- 
port, Boston, Magnolia, ete, 
