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NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 45 
Tue Turee Laps who broke into a garage and re- 
moved an automobile for a mid-night ride at Beverly 
Farms had an adventure they will long remember. In 
an incredibly short while the parties were overtaken, the 
ear abandoned and consequently captured, and a search for 
the offenders begun. A trap was laid and the lads walked 
into it. For their intelligence and promtness the police 
department in Beverly Farms should be commended 
The owner of the car has declined to prosecute the boys 
because he feels that the ends of justice have been ob- 
tained. His judgment must stand. To have committed 
the lads to a penitentiary would have ruined them. The 
boys received some good advice, have learned a serious 
lesson, and have a bill on their ‘hands to pay, and are 
now on probation. Any further offense by any of the 
lads will make them liable for the offense committed 
last week. It is safe now to assume that the youths of 
this locality have had an object lesson that will not soon 
be forgotten. 
HoL_iAND Oucu’ To BE ABLE to drown the war spirit, 
if Germany becomes aggressive. 
SWAMPSCOTT 
Miss Sylvia T. Goulston, elder daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. Edward S. Goulston, 282 Puritan road, Swampsoit, 
was married there Wednesday night to Carl Dreyfus. 
About sixty relatives and friends of the families witnessed 
the ceremony performed by Dr. Levi of Boton. The only 
attendant was Miss Margaret Goulston, a younger sister 
of the bride. Mrs. Dreyfus was graduated from Wellesley 
in June and was one of sixteen seniors whose engage- 
ments were announced at the class dinner. During her 
college life she was associate editor of the ‘“Legenda,” and 
a member of the Zeta Aluha Society. In college dramatics 
she was prominent. Because of the war the proposed 
honeymoon of Mr. and Mrs. Dreyfus in Europe has been 
abandoned, and they will make a long automobile tour 
instead. . 
Mrs. Eugene W. Ong of Brookline and _ Phillips 
Beach is one of the principal entertainers on the Swamp- 
scott shore this season. Many delightful social functions 
have been held at her charming summer home on Atlan- 
tic ave., and as in former years, she has been one of the 
“live-wires” in the summer contingent there. Mrs. Ong 
had down for Friday last and the week-end Mr. and 
Mrs. R. J. Schweppe of Los Angeles, Cal. 
A luncheon of twelve covers was given by Mrs. Ethel 
M. Burton of Beach Bluff at the Eastern Yacht club on 
Tuesday. The afternoon was spent at the clubhouse with 
bridge. Mrs. Burton is one of the several New Yorkers 
on the Swampscott shore this year; she is a regular visitor 
to the North Shore each summer. 
Mrs. H. L.. Taylor of the Beach Bluff colony is giving 
a dancing party to about one hundred of her friends at 
her home on Atlantic ave. this evening. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Cutler of the Swampscott colony 
are entertaining at a dance at their summer home “Wave- 
crest,” this evening. They are having about 125 guests 
from various parts of the shore for the hop. Mr. and 
Mrs. Cutler entertained over the last week-end Mr. and 
Mrs. Munroe of Brookline, who paid them a visit at their 
shore home. 
A party of guests from the Lincoln House, Swamp- 
scott, who were entertained at the Blue Bird Grill on 
Puritan road this week included Mrs. Boynton, Mrs. God- 
ding, Mrs. Billings and Mrs. Livermore. The party 
» lunched at the Grill on Tuesday. 
Wuy SHovuLp THE Prick oF FLour be higher when 
there is an unprecedented crop awaiting the miller? Fools 
rush in to buy and prices automatically rise. 
THE CENSORSHIP OF THE WAR News has been hard 
on the newspapers, but it has spared the reading public 
perusing many a harrowing tale. 
THE SERVIAN Minitary Leavers must be delighted 
at the martial conflict Austria has pre¢ipitated by her 
attack. 
RoosEvELT ‘HAs Lost his one chance to redeem him- 
self. The Progressive Party must still linger on for slow 
but inevitable death. 
CREAM OF TARTAR is on the rise—of course—to have 
been expected as a matter of fact. : 
Mexico Has Nor declared war on Germany. 
LONGSUFFERING and indomitable Belgium! 
s 
Dancing has caught on in the Swampscott colony 
quite as much as in other sections of the North Shore. 
One evidence of this is in the large gathering of young 
people seen almost nightly on the terraces of the charm- 
ing new estate of Mr. and Mrs. Simon Vorenberg on 
Puritan road. Since its completion the new Vorenberg 
villa has housed many delightful parties and social func- 
tions and these little informal gatherings of the young 
people, who dance and make merry on the spacious lawns 
of the place, make it one of the popular places in the 
Puritan road section of Swampscott. Mr. Vorenberg, 
who was one of the passengers on the so-called treasure- 
ship “Kronprinzessin Cecilie’ which came in at Bar Har- 
bor two weeks ago, is finishing his vacation at Jackson, 
N. H. He had planned to take the cure abroad, but the 
European troubles made a hasty return of the Cecilie 
imperative. Mr. Vorenberg is none the worse for his 
experience, however, and is getting into trim again, as he 
expresses it, with plenty of golf and tennis at Jackson. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Lang and daughter of the Twin 
Mountain House, N. H., were guests of the Vorenbergs 
over the last week-end. 
Joseph Bradley, dancing instructor at the Oakland 
House, Swampscott, has just returned from New York 
with several new dances which his several pupils at the 
hotel are mastering. Mr. Bradley has had much success 
at the Oakland this summer, due probably to the increased 
interest taken by everyone in the modern dances. The 
Oakland is continuing through August comfortably filled 
with guests. Among those to arrive the past week were: 
Miss Frances L. Thomas, Miss Eva Thomas and Miss 
M. Gertrude Carder of Devereux; Mr. and Mrs. C. S. 
Greer and daughter of Rockville, Conn.; Robert J. Bot- 
tomly, chairman of the Boston finance commission. he 
Oakland will not close until October 1. 
Arrivals at’ the Hotel Bellevue, Swampscott, include 
J. R. Taylor of Ambler, Pa.; Thomas Henzelton of Dor- 
chester; H. S. Cutler of Boston; W. S. Service of Phila- 
delphia ; Augustine Dockham of Chelsea; Mr. and Mrs. S$. 
E. Crampton of Brookline; Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Richard- 
son of Brookline. 
Abel I. Culver of Albany, N. Y., joined his family 
at the New Oean House during the week to stay for the 
balance of the season. 
Yearly subscription to North Shore Breeze, $2.00. 
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