NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
How would you run a Tire Business? 
Suppose you were a tire dealer. Suppose, after experiment- 
ing with the various brands of tires on the market, you 
found one certain brand that rarely gave a customer cause 
to come back with a complaint—a tire manufactured by 
America’s representative tire concern—made by a co- 
operative method of manufacture, whereby the strongest 
points of four famous brands were incorporated into 
this one tire. 
Wouldn’t you consider it good business to sell and 
recommend such a tire? 
United States Tires 
answer this description exactly. We heartily recommend 
these tires to our customers because we know we are giving 
them the utmost tire value and the most certain protec- 
tion against trouble they can possibly get for their money. 
Cost no more than you are asked to pay for other kinds. 
THOMAS D. CONNOLLY, 2nd 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
The engagement of Childs Frick to Miss Frances 
Dixon of Baltimore interests the younger members of the 
North Shore colony. Mr. Frick is a Princeton man and 
has been a hunter of big game. He led the Childs Frick 
Abyssinian expedition a few years ago, and only recently 
came back from a second trip to Africa. Miss Dixon, 
who came out three seasons ago, is considered one of the 
most beautiful of the young,women for which the Oriole 
City is famous. Last year she went abroad with Mr. and 
Mrs. Frick on their yacht and later traveled with them 
in Egypt. Miss Helen Frick and Miss Dixon are great 
chums, and the latter has spent much time visiting the 
Fricks at Pride’s Crossing in seasons past. 
Mrs. “Jack” Gardner motored down the North Shore 
Sunday and dined at the home of Hon. T. J. Coolidge at 
Manchester. Mr. Coolidge will have with him for the 
summer his daughter Mrs. Lucius Manlius Sargent, who 
has rented her beautiful large house at Pride’s Crossing 
to the W. S. Kuhns of Pittsburg. The Francis L. Hig- 
ginson, Jrs., planned to arrive at their cottage on Coolidge’s 
Point today. 
o 89 
Mrs. S. Fisher Corlies and her daughter, Miss Mar- 
garet Corlies, the author, of Philadelphia, who have a cot- 
tage at Magnolia, have arrived for the summer. 
John Hays Hammond of Gloucester has bought of 
Mrs. George M. Pullman for about $350,000 the beauti- 
ful residence just erected by her on the east side of Ave- 
nue of the Presidents, between K and L streets, in Wash- 
ington. The house, which never has been occupied, was 
erected when the widow of the palace car magnate ex- 
pected to make Washington her home. Her son-in-law, 
Frank O. Lowden of Illinois, was then a member of he 
House of Representatives, but he failed of re-election in 
1910 and Mrs. Pullman changed her plans. Mr. Ham- 
mond, whose Washington residence has been. at 2315 
Massachusetts avenue for many years, has spent much of 
his time there. Although he has refused to enter official 
life, declining the post of Minister to China, offered him 
by President Taft, he served as special ambassador of 
the President to attend the coronation of King George 
Mr. and Mrs. rants in fission and their family 
are preparing to close their Beacon street residence, Bos- 
ton, the coming week, and in accordance with their usual 
custom are to spend the summer at their Pride’s Cross- 
ing estate. 
o 29 
Mrs. Henry C. Weston has closed her Boston house | 
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at 177 Beacon street, and is settled at her summer home at © 
Beverly Farms for the season. 
