THE HARRIETTE PALMER 
HAT SHOP 
While most other shops are now closing out summer 
hats, we have all the new Fall hats in satins, soft felts, 
silk beaver and velvet, large, medium and small shapes; 
also the new novelties for trimming these. 
161 BROAD STREET, - . - - LYNN 
“IF ITS MADE OF RUBBER, WE HAVE IT’ 
From a NIPPLE to an AUTO TIRE 
SPORTING COODS BATHING SUPPLIES 
CoR-NIX RUBBER CO. 
261 CABOT STREET 
Beverly, Mass. 
1227 MARKET STREET 
Lynn, Mass. 
2 LIVE 
STORES 
Miss Margaret Wright entertained at luncheon Sun- 
day at the New Ocean House Mrs. L. S$. Day and Mrs. 
G. D. Cutler, both of St. Louis, Mo. 
Numerous luncheon parties were given at the New 
Ocean House last Sunday, many of which were composed 
of automobilists. Some of the luncheon guests on that 
day included the following: Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. 
Clarke and John A. Clarke of Winchester, Mr. and Mrs. 
J. B. Sweet, Jr.. and Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Chapin, Jr., of 
Providence; Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Haskell, Mr. and Mrs. 
W. L. Hammond, Miss Ida M. Peacock, all of Shrews- 
bury; H. P. Hovey and party of Worcester; Mrs. Walter 
Hidden, Mrs. Walter S. Hackney, Miss Helen Hackney 
of Providence. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Fitzgerald and Miss Mary E. 
Fitzgerald of Boston have returned for the month of 
August at the New Ocean House. 
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mitchell Chapple and Harry Chap- 
ple of Boston, were entertained as guests of the New 
Ocean House last Sunday. 
Among the recent arrivals at the New Ocean House 
have been the following: William O. Lentz, Philadelphia ; 
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Mercur, Montreal; Mrs. C. D. Pea- 
cock, Jr., Miss Mildred Peacock, Miss Margaret Peacock, 
Miss Catherine Peacock, Mr. and Mrs. Frank R. Judd, 
Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Aldrick A. Ray, Mr. and Mrs. H. 
K. Whitner, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel McCaury, Buffalo, N. 
Y.; Mrs. William A. Crowell, Miss Roxana G. Roth, R. 
L. Mitchell, R. L. Black, New York; Mr. and Mrs. J. L. 
Moore, Fort Plain, N. Y.; Dr. Alfred J. Heart, New 
York; C. C. Asham, Portland, Me.; Charles Peck, Bos- 
ton; J. B. Lewis, Reading; Mr. and Mrs. A. Hecht, Miss 
Alice Hecht, New York; Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Whit- 
comb, Worcester; Mrs. J. Herbert Moore, Brookline; E. 
E. Staples, Boston; Albert J. Osgood, Washington; Mr. 
and Mrs. Charles Vose, Walpole; Mr. and Mrs. M. E. 
P. & M. Women’s Sperialty Shop 
145 Broad Street, Lynn, Mass. 
All our stock is from the Most Reliable Manufacturers and 
displayed under glass. Our shop is light and airy, away from 
the bustle of the down town district where you can make your 
shopping a pleasure instead of a task. 
PRISCILLA L. POPE LOUISE M. MITCHEL]I, 
LONVAL’S 
MEN’S FURNISHINGS 
Cor. Union and Mulberry Sts., Lynn. 
Custom Laundry Telephone 1654 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
| LYNN’S BIG DEPARTMENT STORE | 
q 
Aug. 11, 1916. 
| “Uf it’s in Lynn, it’s at Magrane’s’’ | 
The P. B. MAGRANE STORE, Inc. 
133 Market Street Lynn, Mass. 
“COE-RECT” 
HATTER HABERDASHER 
If at Coe’s It’s “Coe-rect’’ 
If “Coe-rect’’ It’s at Coe’s 
FRANK M. COE 
124 MARKET STREET, LYNN, MASS. 
“COE-RECT” ———————____ 
Converse, Malden; Mrs. A. J. Nichols, A. M. Nichols, 
Mrs. George Heyworth, Providence; W. A. Hamilton, 
New York; Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Apsley, Hudson; H. B.. 
-Goodrich, Haverhill; Mr. and Mrs. George H. Locke, 
Denver, Col.; Charles Agnew, Paterson, N. J 4’ Myra 
Mrs. Shepard Dillingham, New York; Mr. and Mrs. 
Royden Loring, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Colby, 
Paterson, N. J.; C. C. Whitmore, Toledo; Otis Everett 
New York; Clarence W. Besten, Louisville, Ky. 
~“COE-RECT”- 
, 
WAMPSCOTT finds the mid-summer with its engage- 
ment book filled to the very brimming, and the incom- 
ing days of the second week in August none-the-less re- 
lenting with reservations on all sides for dinners, lun- 
cheons and card parties. The season of 1916, so far has 
eclipsed all others in the past for its round of social 
gaieties. The bathing-beaches each day are the popular 
gathering place for the cottagers and hotel folk with a 
wonderful and gorgeous display of pretty sea frocks and 
capes, the newest production from the wheel of fashion. 
zx Mrs. John Donovan of St. Joseph, Mo., who is spend- 
ing the summer at the New Ocean House, Swampscott, 
entertained her sister, Miss Helen Hart of Weymouth 
over the week-end. 
Miss Jessica Carbee of Boston, who is spending the 
suinmer at Clarmont, N. H., has been visiting her father, 
Scott Clifton Carbee, the artist, who is occupying the 
Thorne cottage at Swampscott, where he has his summer 
studio. 
DESPITE the inclement weather the mid-summer ball 
at the Tedesco club on Wednesday evening was a 
very brilliant and festive affair. The clubhouse was trans- 
formed into a veritable floral bower. Myriads of electric 
lights enhanced the beauty of the scene. The spacious 
verandas were enclosed with awnings and decorated with’ 
trellises over which twined floral vines. A pergola was 
erected from the west veranda and was covered with 
vines and. potted plants. The immense lounging room 
was decorated with festoons of vines and red flowers in 
which were hidden electric bulbs. The reception and 
dining room decorations were carried out in pink and 
white. Dinner was served, beginning at 6.30 and con- 
tinued until 8, when the tables were cleared away and 
dancing inaugurated. The Salem Cadet band, stationed 
ON THE ROAD TO THE NEW OCEAN HOUSE . 
PIPER & STORER 
Gown Shop 
57 Puritan Road, Swampscott Tel. Lynn 3206-R 
Lynn Shop, 35 New Ocean St. Tel. Lynn 3090 
