NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
REMEMBER 
That the life of your watch is determined by the care you give it. 
If you ill- 
treat it by allowing it to accumulate dirt and run year after year on dry bearings 
you will soon ruin it as a time piece. 
Your watch should be put in order at least every two years. 
slight compared to the value ot the watch. 
The cost is 
Let us give it the attention that it needs. 
Hens. THOMPSON, Jeweler 
164 Main Street - 
Gloucester, Mass. 
Axel Magnuson 
FLORIST and LANDSCAPE GARDENER 
BRIDGE STREET, 
MANCHESTER. 
EASTER LILLIES 
Carnations 
Violets 
Flowering Plants 
Telephone 172-2 
A. H. Higginson, Pres. 
W. B. Calderwood, Supt. 
C. W. McGuire, Treas. 
DAVID FRBENTON Co, Manchester-by-the-Sea 
Boats stored for the Winter. 
ment of Launches. 
OSTEOPATHY 
Chronic and Nervous Diseases 
a specialty 
Dr. J. Oliver Sartwell 
Dr. Blanche B. Sartwell 
DIAN RSS D9, Chee SALEM, MASS. 
Room 39 Tel. 1879M 
Treatments at home or office 
Residence Phone Danvers 298W 
W. J. CREED 
* CATERER x 
And Private Waiting 
EAST CORNING STREET 
BEVERLY COVE, MASS. 
Telephone 765 Beverly 
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 
We carry everything appertaining to the equip- 
Spray Hoods Made to Order 
towed in and out of channel, free of charge. 
Boats hauled on our railways, 
TELEPHONE 254 MANCHESTER 
OUR WET WASH IS THE REAL 
“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- 
er. Clothes called for, cleansed, the water 
extracted and the lot promptly returned for 
SOc. 
THE SALEM LAUNDRY 
Telephone 1340 Salem 
Dunn’s and Knight’s Expresses, Agents 
Miss Luey Aspinwall of Boston 
and Coolidge’s Point, Manchester, 
who is in a Huropean school, is due 
home in June. Miss Aspinwall 
makes her social debut next winter. 
3% 3 3 
John Hays Hammond and family 
expect to return to their home at 
Lookout Hill, Gloucester, about May 
15. John Hays, Jr., is arriving this 
week, 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Francis I. Amory and daughter, 
Miss Mary Josephine Amory of Bos- 
ton and Beverly Cove are enroute 
for Europe on the Berlin. Travel- 
ing with them is Miss Margaret 
Stackpole of Boston. They plan to 
visit Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grant, 
Jr., (Priscilla C. Stackpole) in 
Paris. The Amorys are not return- 
ing to Boston until September. 
2 0 % 
vo ve ve 
Mrs. A. Octavia Wilkins of Cam- 
bridge and Magnolia, has secured 
passage on the George Washington 
for a summer S sour abroad. 
Mr. and Mrs. ‘Eben D. Jordan will 
sail for Europe on the Laconia on 
April 30 and will remain abroad un- 
til November. They will be in Lon- 
don and Paris until June, and will 
then go to Germany and Austria, 
where they will spend some time. 
Mr. and Mrs. Jordan will return to 
England for a number of weeks, and 
in August they will meet Mr. and 
Mrs. Robert Jordan and Miss Doro- 
thy Jordan at Drummond Castle in 
Scotland, which they have again 
leased for the season. Mr. and Mrs. 
Robert Jordan are planning to oc- 
cupy ‘‘The Rocks,’’ the Jordan es- 
tate at West Manchester, for the 
early summer. Miss Dorothy Jor- 
dan will be with them. Mrs. Jordan 
(Jane Laurel), the recent bride, will 
be recalled as a former stage fav- 
orite and leading lady in the John 
Drew company, 
The Robert L. Raymonds are not 
planning to occupy their estate on 
Beach street, Manchester, the com- 
ing season. They contemplate mak- 
ing Readville their  all-the-year- 
round residence in the future. 
38 
Mrs. John C. Phillips of North 
Beverly, who has been in London for 
the winter and early spring, is now 
in Paris for a soloure: 
The Hon. A. Shania of Boston 
and Beverly was the guest of honor 
at a dinner tendered him by Presi- 
dent Tilden of the Union League 
club, during his recent short stay in 
Philadelphia. The Hon. M. J. Ryan, 
city solicitor of Philadelphia, and 
well known in Boston, through his 
connection with the United Irish 
League, was sag oe of a guests. 
Mrs. Robert D. Evans of 17 Glou- 
eester street, Boston and Burgess 
Point, Beverly, gave a luncheon at 
her home last Sunday for 30 guests. 
A musicale followed the luncheon. 
