34 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
July 14, 1916. 
Why not motor to town and 
visit our Specialty Store. 
You 
summer gowns and suits for 
will find lovely new 
day and evening wear. 
their marriage in January, are making a short stay with 
Mr. Cole’s ‘parents, . Mr. and > Mirs> Hs) @ Cole “or 
“Brookby Farm,” Wenham. Mr. and Mrs. William H. 
Coolidge, Jr., (Eleanor Cole) of Manchester have also 
spent the past two weeks at the Cole home. 
“To increase their income” has always been the 
keynote of the exchange carried on in connection with 
the Wenham tea house. Mrs. E. B. Cole has always 
had special charge of this department. The work is of 
a high grade and is made by women in the village and 
country who would otherwise be idle part of the time 
and who enjoy earning a little more by bringing their 
excellent handiwork to the tea house, where they have 
a ready market for it. The beginning was small, but 
through Mrs. Cole’s steady work and encouragement, the 
exchange has taken on a very “store like’? appearance 
in one end of the new tea house. The pretty things 
and the beautiful flowers from Miss Helen Burnham’s 
garden at “Overlook” made the place a delightful place 
for tea parties the past week. Next week the Aquidneck 
Cottage Industries of Newjort, R. I., will exhibit at the 
tea house. This is work similar to the exchange method 
in Wenham, only it has grown on a larger scale in the 
past ten years. The tea house is simply offering its 
rooms as a courtesy. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Prince of ‘‘Princemere,”’ 
Wenham, will soon sail for a visit to France, where their 
sons, Norman and Frederick H. Prince, Jr., are serving 
in the French aviation corps. 
The chain of tea rooms beginning in Manchester with 
the long established Sign of the Crane on Summer street ; 
the new Homestead Tea Rooms on Sea street in Manches- 
ter; the Tunipoo Inn tea room at Beverly Farms; the 
new Bluebird Tea Room on Hale street at Pride’s Cross- 
ing; and ending with the Puritan Tea Room at Mont- 
serrat, are typical North Shore tea rooms, each spectal- 
izing in its own way. 
“T married Jack to reform him.” 
‘Atiowhatr: 
“Of telling other girls that he loved them.’ 
bf 
CORSETRY A FINE ART 
IS THE IDEA WHICH 
INFUSES anno DOMINATES 
THE 
SHOP - GOODS - SERVICE 
AT THE 
IVY CORSET SHOP 
143 ESSEX ST., SALEM 
$1.00 TO $15.00 IN STOCKS 
$15.00 TO $30.00 ON ORDER 
“OYDITH TERRACE” is having its lily season. 
723 Boylston Street 
Boston 
TELEPHONE 2526 
BACK BAY 
For 
six weeks the pure white candidum lily will reign 
supreme in these lovely gardens in Beverly Farms near 
West Beach, where Mr. and Mrs. Sydney E. Hutchinson 
of Philadelphia make their home. The gardens re 
noted for their lilies and for the general architectural 
plan. High palings screen it from the roadway, although 
delightful vistas may be seen between the _ palings 
and at the gateways. On entering, the long and orderly 
beds of flowers, massed for color effects and surrounded 
by low borders of English box, form a beautiful and 
almost’ bewildering picture. One may as well go up the 
long grassy walk to the white seat under the big willow 
tree and after viewing the garden as a whole, then walk 
among the beds, where the roses, fourteen varieties, 
ranging from the rich tea rose to the baby ramblers, fill 
bed after bed and run riot over some archways near the 
willow tree. The lilies are in four long beds and their 
whiteness forms a striking contrast for the bright red 
and pink roses. Next to the garden and directly opposite 
the West Beach bathing pavilion is low swampy land 
flooded by both salt and fresh water. The Hutchinsons 
have a force of men at work who are rapidly converting 
this into a natural garden. ‘There are no trees on the 
spot, but trees are to be planted, wild flowers brought to 
it and with rocks and grass this will be made into a 
natural looking garden this summer and fall. The large 
vegetable garden of the Hutchinsons shows many at- 
tractive vegetable beds bordered with flowers used espe- 
cially for cutting, and also some old-fashioned flowers 
are seen here. A visit to the greenhouse shows luscious 
melons, tomatoes and long cucumbers. But “Sydith 
Terrace” must be remembered not for its vegetables and 
assortments of flowers, but for its Japanese iris, its lilies 
and roses, of which there are none more beautiful any 
place on the North Shore. 
A shipment of beautiful new Mexican handicrait 
has been received by Mrs. Lula Hamer at the Mexican 
room at the Boston Tea Party on Lexington avenue. This 
collection contains Mexican rugs, hangings, curios and 
feather-work. 
SALEM'S FASHION HOUSE 
Distinctive Smart apparel for Men, Women and Children. 
ESSEX STREET : : SALEM 
The Founder’s Signature and Trade Mark 
THE LEADER 
Every Day is Carrying This Reliable Store Further Ahead. 
