50 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Linnln finns 
Swampscott, - MASSACHUSETTS 
1915 SEASON 
Us 1915 season opens on or about June 
20th. Reservation of accommodations 
may be made for the 1915 season at this 
time. Our aim for 1915 will beto constant- 
ly increase the efficiency of the service 
rendered by the house. 
For reservations, booklet, literature, etc., Address Roy F. Bergen- 
gren, Booking Clerk, 15 Bergengren Bldg., Lyan, Mass. 
in London. They plan to return to their summer home 
at Beach Bluff as soon as they can obtain accommodations 
to the States. 
A social event of note on the Swampscott shore will 
come next Wednesday evening, with the marriage of 
Miss Sylvia T. Goulston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- 
ward S. Goulston of Brookline and Puritan road, to Carl 
Dreyfus. ‘The ceremony will take place at the Swamp- 
scott summer home of the Goulstons at 6.30 o’clock. The 
bride will have but one attendant, her sister Margaret. 
Mr. and Mrs. Percival B. Palmer of Chicago, have 
as their guests for a two weeks’ stay, their son and 
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. N. Chapin Palmer and 
Frank H. Warren, Jr., all of Chicago. The Palmers will 
remain on the shore until October, before returning to 
the West. 
The week following the mid-summer ball at the Te- 
desco Country club, Swai mpscott, is always a comparative- 
ly quiet one. There were about 160 at dinner on Wed- 
nesday evening, when the 8th Regiment band gf Lynn 
gave a concert at the club. Mrs. Sie Taylor was host- 
ess to a party of ladies at luncheon and bridge at the Te- 
desco on Tuesday. ‘The ever-popular tea dance will come 
tomorrow afternoon and, as usual, will bring the usual 
large number of young people and matrons of the upper 
North Shore. Next Wednesday evening the Salem Cadet 
band will give the mid-week concert at “the clubhouse. 
LINCOLN HOUSE, Swampscott, will be open the 
first two weeks in ‘September and possibly the whole 
month. Frequenters of the North Shore are beginning 
to realize that September is the most beautiful month ot 
the summer and there has been a considerable demand 
for September reservations. If this continues sufficiently 
the house will remain open. The Lincoln House is so 
weli supplied with large fire-places and so well heated that 
it is the ideal late season house. Among improvements 
contemplated for next season are large plate glass win- 
dows in the office and music rooms. These windows will 
be about eight by ten feet, making the office outlook and 
the view from the music room direct on the water. The 
music room is to be entirely remodeled and the indirect 
lighting system intalled in the dining room, with possibly 
a large piazza built ‘out from the dining room on the Lynn 
side to increase its capacity and to supply a beautiful din- 
ing place which will be directly over the water. Among 
the arrivals at the Lincoln House during the past week 
are Dr. Thomas Armory De Blois and Miss Elizabeth A. 
De Blois of Boston; W. D. Gerney, N. Y.; Miss Emily 
Smith, Washington, D. C.; Mr.and Mrs; Kr L. Froment, 
Mrs. E. S. Rand and Miss Louise Wilson of New York 
city; Mrs. V. C. Wagner of Chicago; Mrs. A. L. Eglinton 
‘cuse, N. Y.; 
Salem 
Colonial Donrmarys 
MODELLED BY SARAH W. SYMONDS 
106 Washington Street, Marblehead and 
Old Ward House, near Essex Institute, Salem 
Cea Room at Marhlehrad 
of New York city; Mrs.. A. E. Forrester, Mrs. David 
Ault and Miss Charlotte Lowry of Cleveland; Mrs. G. 
B. Sargent of Lawrence; Mrs. F. B. Strunz and daughter 
and Mr. and Mrs. Albert A. Gordon, Jr., and family of 
Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Pierce, Mrs. Samuel E. 
Shipp and Miss M. S. Heard of Newburg, N. Y.; Miss 
M. L. Henry of New Jersey; Miss Mildred F. Lovejoy 
of Arlington; Miss Flora W. Whitney of Newtonville; 
Miss Annie I. Donald of Somerville; Mr. and Mrs. Ira 
Garrison and Mrs. M. C. Smith and daughter of Syra- 
cuse, N. Y.; J. L. Orcutt of Boston; Dr. and Mrs. H. D. 
Bishop of Cleveland; George E. Crampton of Brookline; 
F. L. Burrill and Miss G. E. Burrill of Laconia, N. H.; 
Miss Katherine Turner and George W. Turner of Syra- 
W. E. Rhodes and daughter of Chicago; and 
Mrs. Mrs, Josephine E.. Gammons of Har a E. Gammons of Hartford, Conn. 
Residents of the | 
North Shore Find 
This Store a a Most 
Convenient and Helpful 
Shopping Place 
Selecting whatever you may need here means 
choosing from the largest stocks and widest as- 
sortments in New England—with prices always 
invitingly low for dependable qualities. 
If you cannot visit the store in person let us 
know by letter or phone what you require and your 
order will be given prompt attention. There will 
be no delivery charges whatever to any city or 
town in Massachusetts, no matter what your pur- 
chase may be. 
Jordan Marsh Company 
Boston’s Greatest Retail 
Establishment 
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