16 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
In view of the demand for private and class lessons 
Albert Latscha of Castle House, New York 
will devote the balance of the season to teaching 
Appointments by 
Telephone Magnolia 8585, 
Terms 
Reasonable 
STUDIO 
I Lexington Row, MAGNOLIA 
Many North Shore people are taking advantage of 
the many opportunities to learn the latest dances this sum- 
mer while they are at the seashore All along the shore 
taere are dancing instructors, but from all we can observe 
the most popular of the teahcers is Albert Latscha, for- 
merly of the Castle House, who is spending the summer 
at Magnolia. Mr. Latscha has opened a studio in the 
group of stores on Lexington ave., next to the Grande 
Maison and is kept busy nearly every hour of the day giv- 
ing instructions to the North Shore’s fairest maids and 
matrons. 
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald oe rae of New York, who 
have the Pickman “Gray” cottage at Beverly Cove,, have 
had as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Lydig Hoyt of New 
York and Newport. 
Auto parties accommodated for luncheon (10.30 a. 
m. to 6 p. m.) and Bridge Parties at the Elizabeth- 
Martha T. Shop, 56 Lothrop St., Beverly—on the shore 
road. adv. 
Work done at your residence if desired, anywhere 
from Manchester to Pride’s. Children’s hair-cutting a 
specialty. J. Vasconcellos, barber, Central Sq., Manches- 
ter. Tel. 53-J. adz', 
Mrs. Carrie F. Bennett 
Che Gift Shop 
Lexington Avenue 
Carefully selected foreign and domestic novelties. 
Children’s dolls, toys, and books a specialty. 
Magnolia 
Anunurenent 
Mrs. Charles Campbell Forbes 
38 East 36th Street, New York 
will be at 
Mrs. Bennett's Shop 
AUGUST 17th to 22nd 
Showing an exclusive line of the latest 
importations in Gowns, Coats, Waists 
and Novelties at very attractive 
prices 
Specializing in 
Experienced Fitter 
Smart Dancing Frocks 
in Attendance 
Mrs. Robert D. Evans was hostess on Wednesday 
afternoon at her North Shore estate, ‘““Dawson hall,” at 
Beverly, where another in the series of musicales was giv- 
en. Her attractive music room, which has been consider- 
ably enlarged, held about a hundred and fifty guests from 
the North Shore colony, who had been invited to hear 
Miss Blanche Hamilton Fox of Boston, the operatic mezzo 
soprano. Her programme was made up chiefly of arias 
selected from her operatic repertoire and she was heard 
in French, German and Italian, as well as in songs in 
English. Mrs. Evans’ guests were enthusiastic in their 
appreciation of Miss Fox’s singing, and their applause was 
acknowledged by several encore numbers. Vincent Doyle 
played the accompaniments for Miss Fox. This was the 
third in the series of such entertainments which Mrs. 
Evans has given this summer. Aside from the enjoyment 
of the musical programme, the guests had the pleasure of 
viewing Mrs. Evans’ wonderful gardens, now in the fuil 
beauty of rich coloring. 
os 
rd 
Miss Crosby, of the Bungalow Shop, Hesperus ave., 
Magnolia, announces that this coming week she will dis- 
play all the French models which will be shown this sea- 
son, and hopes her customers wil take advantage of this 
‘ fact, and call to see them at their earliest convenience. 
The young men at Magnolia and vicinity who have 
come to know De Pinna’s men’s shop at the branch store 
there are making this place their headquarters for clothes 
of distinction and everything in men’s wear. Especially 
in the furnishings, their line of English Jersey jacket coats, . 
Henley stripe four-in-hands and white flannel trousers 
have been quite the proper thing in young men’s wear at 
Magnolia this summer. Next season the De Pinna com- 
pany plans to carry a much larger stock of men’s furnish- 
ing goods, so that men can do their shopping as easily at 
Magnolia as they can in New York or elsewhere. De 
Pinna also carries an excellent line‘in its boys’ department. 
Miss Carol Bradley of Ladies’ Home Journal has 
been visiting Miss Mary H. Northend of Salem. Ekin . 
Wallick and Arthur Dodds of New York were also the 
guests of Miss Northend. October 4th, Little & Brown 
will publish “Historic Homes of New England,” by Mary 
H. Northend, author of “Colonial Homes and Their Fur- 
nishings.” This book which embraces many of the his- 
toric houses of New England will be if anything ‘more 
popular than the first one, which in sale has exceeded that 
of any book of its kind brought out by these publishers. 
Miss Northend is at present working on a book entitled 
“Remodelled Farmhouses,” which is written in collabora- 
tion with Ekin Wallick of New York, who is promin- 
ently connected with Ladies’ Home Journal. This work 
will show some of the remodelled houses along the North 
Shore and will be a unique book of its kind, dealing with 
the subject differently than it has ever been treated before. 
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Fitzsimmons, of Waterbury, 
Conn., who are touring along the shore, spent the week- 
end at the New Ocean House. 
