22 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Arts and Crafts Gifts 
Exclusive 
Childrens’ Wear 
Womens’ 
o 
i The Only Auto Supply Hous 
# Along the North Shore 
*, 
29,8904 9 09, So, 
'90°00'99'6-8'9-9" ees 
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: Manchester Branch - 33 CENTRAL STREET 
i 
iG & Swett C Inc. # 
a reen ett OmMmpany inc. # 
; = 
x Our Auto Tires and Supplies are i 
= first quality. Everything we sell is % 
i guaranteed, Call for our 1912 it 
a catalogue. Telephone 182 it 
3 Maine Store: 737 Boylston St., Boston. 3 
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33 
3% 
x D. H. MAMPRE 
i THE WELL-KNOWN ‘ 
3% 
: ’ 
i LADIES’ TAILOR : 
3% 
i 4 
i has returned to Beverly and re-opened parlors at 4 
z 
ve NY 
i 197 CABOT STREET, BEVERLY : 
% ~=Where he will be pleased to serve his patrons of the North 
* Shore, in his former courteous and satisfactory manner. 
32 Telephone 
: 
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$3 
¥ TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: i 
‘ : 
z The partnership heretofore exist- 3 
i ing between Burton W. Pelton and 33 
3 . 1 Dp ; . 33 
3% Waldo F. Peart, doing business un- it 
i der the style of Burton W. Pelton 3 
8 Company is this day dissolved by 3 
3% mutual consent. is 
3 All parties having claims: against 8 
33 the firm are requested to present 38 
3% Meta pera 3 
3 their bills and all parties indebted 32 
+ to the firm are requested to make % 
i payment at once to George KE. Will- YY 
¢ monton, Attorney, Cor. School and 3% 
ne Union streets, Manchester, Mass. i 
3 BURTON W. PELTON 
32 33 
2 WALDO F. PEART % 
33 Manchester, Mass., July 27, 1912. x 
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LUNCH ROOMS 
Educational and Industrial Union 
264 Boylston St., Boston, Opp. Public Garden 
Automobile Luncheons 
Candy Kitchen Candies 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reece have 
taken a cottage at West Manches- 
ter for the balance of the summer. 
They have the small Dennis cottage 
on Harbor st., formerly occupied by 
the Charles E. Hodges. 
4222 
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, 
2nd, who have been summering at 
Manchester Cove have left for the 
Carnegie camp at Racquette lake, 
N. Y., where they will be the remain- 
der of the season. 
Miniatures 
It is seldom one finds, in our day, 
such exceptional talent as is shown 
by the work of a young artiste in a 
small collection of miniatures on 
ivory exhibited by Dreicer and Com- 
pany, Jewels, The Colonnade, Mag- 
nolia. Miss Harriette E. Draper, age 
twenty-two, has accomplished what 
many a student has worked years 
to attain and then failed. Her min- 
iatures are portraits. 
pressed with the fact that she has 
visualized on ivory a personality, 
not a decoration. We have before 
us two portraits—one of Miss ‘‘C,”’ 
which was exhibited during the past 
winter by the well known art deal- 
ers, Knoedler and Company of New 
York. The tone harmony is_ well 
adapted to the subject. Pitched in 
a blonde key with carefully modu- 
lated lines, the observer is led to feel 
that the artist’s color sense is taste- 
ful and correct. The second minia- 
ture is that of a voung lady in street 
costume. This picture differs in 
style and treatment from the pre- 
ceding one, showing the versatility 
of the artist. - But. Miss Draper’s 
real strength is in her ability to 
catch the expression of the eyes and 
mouth, in which lie hidden the more 
subtle shades of character. Miss 
Draper is spending the summer on 
the North Shore, at Fernwood, 
Gloucester, and will no doubt re- 
ceive many commissions, which, if 
she executes in as admirable a man- 
ner_as the ones before us, will gain 
for her many new admirers. 
Work done at your residence if de- 
sired, anywhere from Manchester to 
Pride’s. Children’s hair cutting a 
specialty. J. Vasconcellos, barber, 
Central sq., Manchester. Tel. 53-12. * 
One is im-- 
