Aug. 25, 1916, 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 49 
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“Wake! For the Sun who scatter’d into flight 
The Stars before him from the Field of Night, 
Drives Night aiong with them from Heav’n and strikes 
The Sultan's Turret with a Shaft of Light.” 
The following tableaux were likewise truly lovely 
in conception and in the artistry with which they were 
staged. 
The Persian dance by Miss Melba Procter following 
the closing tableau of Omar was unusually appreciated by 
reason of the greater interpretation given it by Mr. 
George Stevens, who accompained the dance with a song. 
The danceuse and singer were accompanied by Miss Leila 
Procter. 
Probably the most artistic tableau of the modern 
group, succeeding the Oriental, was that of the “Grecian 
Frieze,” in which appeared Misses Ellen Olsen, Lilias 
MacLane and Virginia Smith. This tableau provoked 
three curtain calls. 
-. The staging of this highly artistic production was 
under the direction of Louis Kronberg of the Grund- 
mann Studios of Boston. The costumes were designed 
by Mrs. Theodore Bernstein and Miss E. L. Paddock of 
New York. 
Those who took part in the various tableaux were 
as follows: Misses Margaret Montgomery, Nietse W. 
Holder, Josephine C. Wall, Marguerite Mitchell, Char- 
lotte Dennison, Mabel Vickery, Marion J. Cantine, Lydia 
Todd, Grace Filkins, Nina M. Stockton, Arrington Butt, 
Adele Blanc, Elizabeth Schmidt, Caroline Stone, Ellen 
Olsen, Lilias MacLane, Virginia Smith, Harriette Brazier, 
Ethel Paddock; Mesdames W. Barrett Ridgely, Theo- 
dore Berstein, Dr. D. M. Robinson; Messrs. Strafford 
Riggs, William J. Little, Robert ©O’Connor, Richard Kim- 
ble, Thorne, Guy Wiggin. W. FE. Atwood, Dana Estes, 
Theodore Riggs. An arrangement of music by Arthur 
Foote and Liza Lehmann was played throughout the en- 
tire program by Mrs. John Brand of Worcester, with the 
exception of Miss Elsie Dufour’s tableau, which was 
played by Miss Olive H. Renton. ries 
The committee was as follows: Louis Kronberg, 
chairman; Misses Jean Oliver, Adeline Piper, Anna Sea- 
ton-Schmidt, Nina M. Stockton, secretary; Mabel Vick- 
ery, assistant stage manager , Benjamin Brewster. 
The list of patronesses follows: Mrs. W. E. Atwood, 
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Mrs. William R. P. Emerson, Mrs. William Fosdick, Mrs. 
Charles Ffoulke, Mrs. Louise A. Hobbs, Mrs. C. A. Hen- 
riques, Mrs. Belle R. Howard, Mrs. R. Eliot Hare, Mrs. 
Herman Hoppe, Miss Anna V. Hyatt, Mrs. Frances Karr, 
Mrs. Charles Kerr, Mrs. Maynard Ladd, Miss Susan A. 
Lyle, Mrs. W. J. Little, Mrs. Charles H. Lunt, Miss 
Madene Lowry, Miss Leila Mechlin, Mrs. Arthur Mer- 
riam, Miss Morris, Mrs. Olmstead, Mrs. C. C. Overton, 
Mrs. Jackson Piper, Mrs. John Parker, Mrs. Walter 
Palmer, Mrs. H. W. Patch, Mrs. David M. Robinson, 
Miss M. P. H. Robbins, Mrs. H. B. Snell, Mrs. Edgar 
Smythe, Mrs. Waterman Taft, Mrs. Herbert Tiffany, 
Miss Elsie Seymour, Mrs. Edward Vickery, Mrs. George 
W. Woodbury, Mrs. John Wilmending, Mrs. Charles 
Wheeler. 
The proceeds of the Omar Khayyam production were 
for the relief of the war sufferers in Paris and are to be 
distributed personally by Miss Elizabeth Nourse, an 
American painter, now in that city. 
ASS ROCKS.—A great social event of the season at 
Bass Rocks was the annual ball held on Friday night of 
last week at the Hotel Thorwald. There were about 600 
people present and many pronounced the affair one of 
the most brilliant balls ever held on the North Shore. 
The big dining room and the reception room were thrown 
into one for the event, giving a wonderful floor space of 
nearly the entire length of the hotel. The decorative 
schere was gold and green, golden glow and golden 
gladioli being used with the lovely green briar, the latter 
being twined gracefully about on the walls and the 
chandeliers. The American flag was also in evidence. 
Sewall’s orchestra of ten pieces, seven of the players 
coming from out of town. furnished the music for the 
occasion. Ladies were strikingly gowned for this annual 
event and not. only was the ball-room a lovely scene of 
life and color, but the lawn of the hotel, between the 
main house and the mansion, gave an exquisite finishing 
touch, with the colored lights and the moonlight covering 
the daintily arranged tables where refreshments were 
A runner was laid from the dining-room steps 
Pierre S. Haley 
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