NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 31 
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NAHANT cottagers are much interested in the engage- 
ment of Miss Mary Lawrence and Stephen Webb 
Sabine, Harvard ’11. Miss Lawrence is the daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. John Lawrence of Boston, who have a 
country place also at Groton. She is one of four daugh- 
ters—Mrs. Richard D. Fay, and Misses Geraldine and 
Harriette P. Lawrence, being the others. 
A special dinner and dance marked the observance 
of the Fourth of July at the Nahant club. Tennis and 
golf was the order of events during the morning and 
afternoon, the half-dozen fine courts adjoining the club 
house being alive with devotees of tennis. Several Na- 
hant members had as their guests at dinner friends from 
other parts of the shore and covers were laid for about 
fifty. Among those noticed at the tables were Mr. and 
Mrs. T. S. Bradley, Mr. and Mrs. James Curtis, Mr. and 
Mrs. H. L. Sigourney, Mrs. A. Codman and Julian Cod- 
man, H., J. H. and A. Blanchard, Mr. and Mrs. John 
Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. 
Thomas Stevenson, Mrs. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. 
Devens, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Boyden, Mr. and Mrs. W. 
Gay, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bacon, T. P. Curtis, Mrs. C. 
T. Logan, jr., J. L. Motley and Warren Motley, Thomas 
Motley, president of the club, and Mrs. Motley. To- 
morrow evening (Saturday) Thomas Stevenson will be 
host to a party of a dozen friends at dinner at the club 
house. ‘The first band concert of the season will be held 
tomorrow evening. ‘The concerts are arranged for every 
other week on alternating Saturday evenings. 
Mr. and Mrs. Royal Robbins of Brookline, who are 
summering again at Nahant this summer in the Edward 
Motley cottage, expect to return tomorrow from a seven 
days’ motor trip to the White Mts. ‘They have been stop- 
ping at the Profile House at the top of the mountains. 
The Hotel Tudor, Nahant, was the scene of many 
ANTIOUES 
ANTIQUE FURNITURE OF ALI, DESCRIPTIONS 
Swell and Serpentine Front Sheraton, 
Chipendale and Heppelwhite Bureaus, 
Heppelwhite Card ‘l'ables, Work ‘lables, 
Breakfast Tables and Dutch ‘Tables. Dish 
Top Stands, Bonnet-Top Highbuoy; one 
pair Heppelwhite Dining Table in Curly 
Maple. . Desks of all Kinds. Sheraton 
Sofas, Sheraton and Chipendale Chairs, 
Old-Fashioned Lamps and many other 
things. Most in the rough, 
E. JACOBS, 
30 WEST STREET BEVERLY FARMS 
motor parties over the Fourth, many taking advantage of 
the Tudor’s special service to motorists this season. 
Among those who motored to the Tudor to spend the 
week-end was a party composed of Mr. and Mrs. B. W. 
Appleton, George M. Appleton and Miss Catherine Apple- 
ton of Buffalo, N. Y. the Appletons are making a tour 
of the New England coast, from Newport to the Maine 
coast. Numbered among the guests who spend the week- 
ends regularly at the Tudor is Miss R. J. Mc’l‘ammany 
of Berlin, Germany, a singer of considerable repute; she 
is spending the summer months in and about Boston. 
Others at the Tudor for stays of varying length include 
Percy F. Baker of Boston; W. B. MacLane of Boston; 
Wm. Ellis Weston of Boston; and Miss Edith L. Munroe 
of Boston. 
The Yellow Daisy Tea Room and Gift Shop—lIces, 
sandwiches, handwork, Mary Elizabeth candies.—Bass 
Point, Nahant, near Bayside Inn. adv. 
Miss Annie Warren, a season guest at the Edgehill, 
Nahant, left this week for a two weeks’ sojourn at New- 
port with friends. She will return to the North Shore 
for the remainder of the summer. Guests at the Edge- 
hill for the whole or a part of the season include Mr. and 
Mrs. Edwin Gilpin of New York; Mr. and Mrs. Living- 
stone, Boston; Mrs. George Whitney and sister, Miss 
Alice Whitney of Boston; Mr. and Mrs. Quincy and son 
Edmond of Boston; Mr. and Mrs. Calhoun of New York; 
Rear Admiral and Mrs. Sutherland of Washington, D. 
C.; Mrs. Bessie Lyman of Boston; Mrs. Louise Joy of 
3oston; Mr. and Mrs. Ely of Boston; and Mr. and Mrs. 
Arthur Richmond, of the same city. 
R. Levine, Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor, Cleaning, 
pressing, repairing. Work called for and delivered. 41 
Willow Rd., Bass Pt., Nahant. adv. 
EDISON Diamond Disk Phonograph 
HERE IS A NEW INSTRUMENT THAT SINGS ITS OWN PRAISKS—THAT SINGS ITS WAY INTO THE HEART OF EVERY 
MUSIC LOVER. 
A triumph of invention, a remarkable pleasure-b earer to you. 
If you ask in what respect the Edison 
Diamond Disc Phonograph surpasses any musical instrument you ever heard, we reply by asking you to 
come to our store and listen. 
Your amazement at the effect will beour answer. 
The Edison plays all makes of dise records. 
some of our latest dance records. 
You'll know then. Won’t you come today and hear 
F. H. THOMAS CO. 
Demonstration Rooms 
30 EXETER ST., Just Off Boylston 
691 BOYLSTON ST., Opp. Hotel Lenox 
