NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 25 
Cobb, Bates & Yerxa Co. 
IMPORTERS AND GROCERS 
Wholesale Department and General Business Offices 
at 222 Summer Street, opposite South Terminal 
BOSTON 
55 Summer St. 87-89 Causeway St. 274 Friend St. 
Also in Salem, Malden, Taunton and Fall River 
RETAIL STORES: 6-8 Faneuil Hall Square 
12 HE CLASS OF ’88 at Harvard has been celebrating 
its 25th anniversary this week. Among the various 
entertainments in connection with the celebration was a 
luncheon for the ladies on Monday at Mrs. Herbert E. 
Gale’s beautiful house at Philips Beach, Swampscott, 
while Bradley Palmer had a field day for his classmates 
at Ipswich. On Tuesday Mr. and Mrs. Larz Anderson 
entertained the whole class at luncheon in their famous 
Italian Garden, and on Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. W. 5S. 
Spaulding of Pride’s Crossing gave a luncheon at the 
Copley-Plaza before the Harvard-Yale baseball game. 
Mrs. C. A. Porter of Beverly Farms was chairman of the 
ladies’ reception committee. Other members of the class 
who have summer residences on the North Shore are 
Charles M. Cabot, Henry Mason and Robert Treat Paine, 
2d, all of whom did more or less entertaining either on 
the shore or in town, in connection with the anniversary. 
A pleasant feature of the trip of the ladies to the North 
Shore Monday was a visit to the beautiful gardens of 
the Spaulding estate, on Greenwood avenue, Beverly 
Farms. The gardens are most attractive at this time of 
year and the owners have very kindly given orders to 
have them open to the public on Mondays, Wednesdays 
and Fridays for the present. 
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Miss Elizabeth Perkins and her guest Miss Jean 
Johnstone are about returning to Boston after a visit to the 
Chateaux Frontenac, Quebec, Montreal and other inter- 
esting places. Miss Perkins will open her Beverly Farms 
cottage the coming week. 
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The Charles E. Cottings of Boston will move into 
their summer home at West Manchester the first of the 
coming week. 
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Miss Comer 
Coiffeuse 
462 Boylston Street 
BOSTON 
Tel. Mag. 55 W 
The woman who knows the comfort of the Comer Lasting 
Hair Wave js ready for summer 
AFTER JUNE 20th 
THE COLONNADE 
SUMMER Arr CLASSES 
W. Lester Stevens, whose articles descriptive of the 
beauty of Cape Ann and vicinity are appearing in the 
Breeze, is a young artist whose work has within a few 
years attracted no little attention among the painters of 
Boston. He has exhibited outside of Boston at the Chi- 
cago. Art Institute, Penna. Academy of Fine Arts, 
and at the National Academy in New York. He has 
studied with a private tutor and at the School of the 
Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. 
For the past two seasons Mr. Stevens has had pu- 
pils at Rockport and desires this summer to obtain pupils. 
Among his pupils has been Miss Alice Van Hise, daugh- 
ter of President Van Hise of the University of Wisconsin. 
Edmund C. Tarbell, whose work is known wherever art 
is spoken of, has recommended Mr. Stevens. very highly 
as a-teacher, as has Phillip L. Hale, the well known Bos- 
ton teacher and artist., Other painters to whom he refers 
are Edward Potthast, N. A., Ernest L. Major, Theodore 
Wendel, Jonas Lie. 
Those summer residents of the North Shore whose 
sons and daughters have artistic ability should communi- 
cate with Mr. Stevens at 1 King Street Court, Rockport, 
Mass. Those who are older and who are desirous of 
obtaining criticisms in out-of-door sketching would also 
do well to send for a prospectus of the class. Mr. 
Stevens would like to have an adult class and a children’s 
class should enough desire to’ join. Either drawing in 
black and white or sketching in color is taught. 
The Henry Mays of Washington arrived the first of 
this week at the N. S. Simpkins house, Beverly Farms. 
The Simpkins family have gone to Barnstable, Cape Cod, 
for the summer as usual. mong. 
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