24 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
INDIAN PLAYERS IN HIAWATHA 
July 31, to August 10—at York, Maine. 
From North Shore, 50 Miles by Road. 
Return 5.54. 
Through trains from Boston 12.50. 
Admission $1. Boxes $9. Write P. O. Box 178 York Village, Me. 
Performances Every day except Sunday 3.30, 8.30. 
An effort is being made to save the woods. 
186 Boylston St., Boston. Fuller St., Magnolia, 3d house south of Post Office. Apple Tree Cottage 
Navajo Rie, The famous Curacao Hats, Brasses, Baskets, Curios, Jewelery 
Toys, Games and Favors. 
: THE INDIAN STORE 
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Antiques, Curios and Works of Art 
Bureaus, tables, chairs, high-boys desks. 
painted at Salem in 1850, by Osgood. 
No collection of American portrait painters is comp'ete without an Osgood, and 
as I have never before known cf one to be in the hands of a dealer, few are complete 
F. W. NICHOLS - 73 1-2 Federal St. - SALEM, MASS. 
Formerly at 67 North Street 
Portrait of two children 
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Che DeMar 
Hair Dressing 
and 
Dressmaking Parlors 
Shampooing, Scalp Treatment 
Facial Massage and Manicuring 
Thirteen Street 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
HAND WROUGHT JEWELRY 
EXCLUSIVE and INDIVIDUAL 
METAL LAMPS, LANTERNS 
EFFECTS 
CANDLESTICKS ae DISTINCTIVE 
Mass. 
Magnolia, 
Tel. Conn. 
Opposite Post Office 
STUDIO CRAFTS SHOP 
M. HAMBURGER 
The Leading Tailor for Men and Women 
HOUSE OF SEVEN GABLES, 1669 
Scene of Hawthorne's Raniaaes 
Open to visitors daily. Six rooms 
We make a Specialty of Uni- 
Pressing 
2 Al neo : 
forms; also Cleaning, BEST and secret Staircase are shown. 
and Dying. We Remodel a Fee 25c. including garden and 
kinds of Furs. counting house. 
Dress Suits to sell or Let. 
Dress Suits to Sell or to Let. 
Telephone 185-2 
- Admission to Hepzibah’s Shop, Free 
Quaint and attractive articles on sale. 
Tea served in the garden. 
Hathaway House (1683) in the same 
grounds. 
54 Turner St., Salem 
We call and Deliver 
JOSEPHINE E. KEEFE: 
Dressmaker _ 
and 
Corsetiere 
of Madison Ave., New York 
Is in Manchester for the Summer 
Months 
Gowns Made and Remodeled 
TheNormantinn 
Magnolia, Mass. 
M. A. Eldridge, Proprietor. 
Accommodation ean be ob- 
tained for the season. Table 
hoard is First Class.—Reason- 
able 
Rates. 
Bes 11 School St., Manchester 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Among the delightful people at 
the Oceanside, Magnolia, this sum- 
mer is Mrs. W. H, Southerland and 
her daughter, Miss Southerland of 
Washington. Admiral Southerland 
will not be in Magnolia this summer, 
much to the regret of his host of 
friends, who have always welcomed 
him on former seasons. He is soon 
to sail from Japan on his homeward 
trip. Next week Mrs. Southerland 
and Miss Southerland are to leave 
Magnolia for the trip across the con- 
tinent in time to meet the Admiral. 
Meanwhile the other of the former 
very popular Southerland girls, now 
Mrs. Lewis J. Bacon, has just arrived 
at The Oceanside with her husband, 
and will remain until the latter 
part of next week. Mrs. Bacon, was 
welcomed back by a host of friends. 
She recently passed through a sey- 
ere illness. Miss Southerland is one 
of the Washington set with whom 
Miss Helen Taft is very intimate. 
Miss Taft is a frequent visitor at 
Magnolia with Miss Southerland. 
3 3% 3 
Harry Lee, son of Mr. and Mrs. 
George Lee, of Beverly Farms and 
Brookline has W. G. Devereux of 
New York City as his guest. The 
name of W. G. Devereux will be 
recognized as that of the well known 
polo player. 
““Shadows’’— a genre painting 
done by Harley M. Perkins, the Bos- 
ton portrait artist, is on exhibition 
in the parlor of the Masconomo, at 
Manchester. The subject is on old 
lady of a past school, seated in an 
old-fashioned rocker. The room is 
the typical New England _living- 
room of a generation ago. The face 
is dimly visible, the shadows of 
gathering twilight falling upon her 
head and penetrating far into the 
room. The sitter embodies the grace 
and charm of age. The expression is 
charm of age. The expression is 
both wistful and meditative. There 
is silence. She dreams of the days 
that are fied, and the loved ones 
gone as life ebbs about her. The 
picture is one that holds the onlook- 
er long after many more brilliant 
paintings have faded from the mind. 
Miss Holland! the dress specialty 
shop of Boston, with summer branch 
in the Colonnade, at Magnolia, is an- 
nouneing in the Breeze this week 
a final clearance sale commencing 
Monday, August 5th, of this sea- 
son’s linen, volie and_ lingerie 
dresses, coats and skirts, to be sold 
regardless of cost. 
