NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
25 
MISS HOLLAND 
Dress Specialty Shop of Boston 
and the Colonnade, Magnolia 
Wishes to announce a 
Final Clearance Sale Commencing August 5th 
of this Season’s 
Linen, Voile and Lingerie Dresses 
Coats and Skirts 
To be sold regardless of cost 
Note: During this sale all purchases are final 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Among the motor parties noted 
shopping in the stores on Lexington 
avenue, Magnolia, recently were 
two automobiles filled with women 
from York Harbor, Me. In the 
party were recognized Mrs. Alfred 
Coxe, the wife of Judge Coxe of 
New York city, and her attractive 
daughter, Miss Isabel E. Coxe and 
the two young daughters of Mrs. 
Robert Amory of Boston, who also 
summers at York Harbor. In an- 
other ear were Mrs. Metcalf of 
Providence and her daughter, and 
Mrs. Doolittle of Utica, N. Y. Mrs. 
Coxe’s maiden name was Mayette 
A. Doolittle. 
222 
Thursday Bal ag August 22, is 
the date set for the entertainment 
to be given at the Hawthorne Inn 
Casino in aid of the Fishermen’s In- 
stitute of Gloucester. The pat- 
ronesses are leaders of the best so- 
ciety along the shore and include 
Mrs. W. A. Taft, Mrs. John Hays 
Hammond, Mrs. John Greenough, 
Mrs. J. Sloat Fassett, Mrs. John 
Clay, Mrs. J. Murray Kay, Mrs. A. 
W. Pollard, Mrs. S. A. Raymond and 
Mrs. Winthrop Sargent, all of 
Gloucester. Miss Hetty Dunaway 
will present the charming little 
sketch, ‘‘The Winsome Widow,”’’ 
adapted from ‘‘The Lady of the 
Decoration.’’ Miss Mabel Vann and 
Miss Mary Shackford are to be the 
piano accompanists. The affair will 
not only be one of social interest, 
but will be for the benefit of one of 
the most worthy institutions of New 
England. 
% 3 % 
Saturday, August 10, Mrs. Anna 
Ernberg will give an exhibition of 
the hand loom and its products as 
seen at Berea, Ky., at the Mas- 
conomo, in Manchester. Berea col- 
lege is an institution which has 
lately become prominent in the 
public eye. The people of the dis- 
trict are shut off from all the advan- 
tages of education and cities and 
are no farther advanced in their 
ways of living than our ancestors 
at the time of the Revolution. In 
fact, many of them are sons and 
daughters of the Revolution, 
thorough Americans, and now Berea 
college is furnishing them with the 
advantages of more metropolitan 
places. Mrs. Ernberg has a home in 
Berea and she is much interested in 
the people of the place. It is hoped 
that the summer residents will give 
their aid to this worthy object. 
Art Exhibition 
We notice with pleasure an inter- 
esting exhibition of oil sketches and 
paintings at the Y. M. C. A. rooms 
in Gloucester, by Messrs. Perkins 
and Cleveland. Out of about fifty 
numbers a majority of those by Mr 
Perkins are of the coast marine sub- 
jects down on these shores and dis- 
tinctly showing his long familiarity 
with the forms and colors of the surf 
and rocks of this neighborhood. The 
harmony and technique in_ these 
sketches is remarkable, while the 
color is brilliant and clean. Compo- 
sition and line are also noticeably 
a part of the intention in each case, 
giving a balance and earrying out 
the principal idea, showing that 
study given to these questions has 
produced results. 
The landscape and especially the 
Bermuda sketches of Mr. Cleveland 
show fidelity to nature, good com- 
position and edlor. There are 
also several very interesting sket- 
ches from France and the southern 
part of Devonshire in the lot—the 
whole number shown covering some 
six years of Mr. Cleveland’s stay 
abroad while studying under differ- 
ent masters. The exhibition will be 
open all next week until August 17. 
