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6 " NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
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HERE is one Shop in 
Manchester-by-the-Sea, 
where the ilttle lady in 
charge wears a gray dress 
on sunshiny days and rose 
colored dress on rainy days, 
that is The Children’s Shop 
on Bridge Street, conducted 
by the Women’s Educational 
and Industrial Union of Bos- 
ton. Miss Constance Syer is 
the little lady in rose or 
gray as the weather may be. 
The little old-fashioned 
: yellow shop which was for- 
4 merly occupied by the Mass. 
Commission for the Blind, 
draws one’s attention at 
onee with its pink gerani- 
ums and blue periwinkles 
outside the windows. While 
it is an interesting place for 
mothers and relatives of 
children, it is a fascinating 
place for little folks themselves to visit on a warm 
morning or a rainy afternoon, for on low shelves are 
all sorts of absorbing things which Miss Syer loves to 
show. There are dolls of various kinds, some no larger 
than your little finger and fully dressed; also paper 
dolls with suit cases, bags and trunks filled with dresses, 
hats and cloaks; Gardeneraft toys to cut out as one 
sits on the grass or veranda or is kept in doors by rainy 
weather—a real country house with flowers, green- 
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WOOLLY SOON vy E> 6 —hlhIo_l™_d°rhuiill BR 
The Oceanside 
and Cottages 
MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
Accommodates 750 
OPEN UNTIL SEPTEMBER 19th 
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house, chicken yards and trees,—all arranged so that 
they can be set up in any form one may wish. Delight- 
ful story books, ‘‘Long Ago Tales’’ of Jack and the 
Bean Stalk, Red Riding Hood and Cinderella. Then 
there are bean bags, wonder balls, sand baskets, new 
and fascinating puzzles, and special rainy day boxes,— 
particularly nice for any little girl or boy who is ill. 
To mothers and other relatives of children the Shop 
will be of interest “= ae 
because of its MR 
dainty clothing. 
Even more impor- 
tant perhaps than 
the charm of sim- 
ple designs, beau- 
tifully executed, 
is the fact that 
the garments are 
made in the Un- 
ion’s own work- 
roomin absolutely 
wholesome condi- 
tions by workers 
employed under 
satisfactory work- 
ing conditions. 
Miss Josephine 
Weymouth, Direc- 
tor of the Hand- 
work Shop at the 
Union, has charge 
of the Children’s 
Shop. 
A collection of paintings by C. Calusd of Constantin- 
ople comprises a most interesting exhibition at his Man- 
chester studio on Central st., opposite the Manchester 
Tea Rooms. He is especially interested in marine sub- 
jects and expects to obtain some excellent motifs for new 
paintings along the North Shore. Mr. Calusd is a grad- 
uate of the Ecole des Beauz Arts Imperiale of Constan- 
tinople and a pupil of Valeri, the court painter. He won 
first prize and a diploma of honor at the International 
Exhibition of Art under the patronage of the Czar of 
Bulgaria. His canvasses have been bought by Queen 
Carmen Sylva and other members of the royal family, 
as well as by the government of Roumania. M. Calusd 
is an Amenian. He has some very beautiful and inter- 
esting things at his Manchester studio. 
NoruMBEGA PARK 
Really charming musical comedies are attracting 
fashionable audiences at the open air theatre in Norum- 
bega Park. The big breezy steel theatre resounds with 
laughter at the mirth producing specialties and all the — 
youngest song hits are delivered by pleasing comedians 
and pretty girls composing the principals and chorus. 
Then there is the spacious restaurant popularly known as 
The Grape Arbor Cafe, where all the seasonable deli- 
cacies may be had at reasonable prices. Other recreational 
accessories comprise zoological gardens, bowling alleys, 
merry-go-round, and the largest, best equipped canoe and 
power launch garage in the world. A motor trip to this 
Microcosm of enjoyment would prove to be one of the 
big events of your vacation. 
