16 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Telephone 
260 Beverly 
Grocery, Bakery, Meat, 
Fish, Dairy, Fruit and 
Vegetable Departments. 
HE Sanitary Food Store of the North Shore 
—Modern Refrigerating—All Meats, Fish, 
Fruits and Vegetables under glass protection. 
YA GH Shs PP ik D 
MARSTON-STURTEVANT CO. 
278 CABOT ST., BEVERLY 
The Complete Food Store 
Telephone 
under 
Competent Management. 
VERYTHING in the Food line of the Very 
Best Quality. All goods in Baling Depart- 
ment are from our own ovens. : a : 
PRO MEP TLay 
The store of Cleanliness—The store of Quality—Tke store of Full Values—The store of Right Prices. 
Closed Wednesday Afternoons. 
260 Beverly | 
Each Department 
We Invite Inspection. 
Invitations have been issued by Mr. and Mrs. Har- 
court Amory of Boston and Pride’s Crossing, for the 
marriage of their daughter, Gertrude Livingston, to Con- 
stantine Hutchins at Trinity Church, Boston, Saturday, 
April 17, at 12:0’clock. The ceremony will be followed 
by a wedding breakfast at the Amory residence on Bea- 
con st. 
oO 8% 9 
Mrs. Gardiner Martin Lane and her young daughter, 
Miss Katherine Lane, who are spending several w ecks at 
Summerville, S. C., have recently been joined there by 
Mrs. Lane’s parents, Prof. and Mrs. Basil Gildersleeve 
of Baltimore, for a fortnight’s visit. Mrs. Lane and 
daughter plan to pass the summer at their Manchester 
estate. 
eh Res 
Mrs. Wim. F- Draper and daughter, Miss Margaret 
Preston Draper of Washington, are to spend the sun- 
mer in Newport, instead of coming to the North Shore. 
They ‘have leased at Newport, George R. Fearing’s villa 
in Narragansett ave., known as the “Orchards.” The 
villa has five acres of land with park terraces and 1s 
modelled after a French chateau. It has not been rented 
in several seasons. 
prospects as a resort this year look 
than for several seasons, if the ren- 
criterion. With April just 
Hathaway, the Marblehead 
ARBLEHEAD’S 
more favorable 
tals made so far form any 
making its bow Gardner R. 
real estate agent, has effected 25 rentals and has several 
other transactions on sumer property fous. A list 
of those whom he has located on the shore of Marble- 
head Neck and Marblehead proper so far is as follows: 
Miss Julia ‘I. Sherman of Buffalo, N. Y., McQueston 
cottage, Manley st., Neck; Miss L. B. coe of Brook- 
line, “Ripley cottage, Ocean ave.. Neck; Augustus Irae 
Ellis of Boston, Ripley cottage, Ocean ave., Neck; Henry 
A. Hildreth of Boston, Palmer cottage, Nashua ave., 
Neck: Mrs. G. D. Kingman of Boston, Andrews bunga- 
low, off Pond st., Marblehead; William B. Cowen, Salem 
Bowers: cottage, off Harbor ave., Neck; Chas. A. Curtis, 
of Boston, Dunlap cottage, Ferry lane, Neck; Miss Har- 
riet ies _Clarke, Worcester, James house, Ocean ave., 
Neck: S. D. Stevens of North Andover, Palmer cottage, 
Flint ‘sty Neck; William J. Hammond of New Orleans, 
La.. Lindsay cottage, Chestnut st., Marblehead; Willian 
P. McMullan of Salem, Palmer cottage, Ocean ave., 
Neck; James P. Munroe of Boston, Walker cottage on 
Follett st.. Neck; Arthur Meeker of Chicago, JlLj;+Kerr 
bungalow, Harbor ave., Neck; Dr. Holland Stevenson 
of Baltimore, Md.. Bowers cottage, Ocean ave., Neck; 
Mrs. Albert P. Goodhue of Salem, Percival house, Ocean 
ave., Neck; Theodore Jones of Boston, Parker house, 
Nanepashmet st., Neck; Mrs. Howell Hinds of Cleve- 
land, Ohio, Wadleignh house, Ocean ave., Neck; Charles 
E. Hodges of Brookline, 
Neck; Charles W. 
Kerr bungalow, Harbor st., 
aes of Boston, Connolly house, 
Brown st., Neck; Mrs. L. V. Wood of Dorchester, Dun- 
lap cottage, Harbor ave > -Negke: Clement B. Newbold of 
Philadelphia, Evans house at Peach's point; Frank H. 
Richards of Boston, Claflin house, Harbor ave., Neck; 
Dr. George E. Percy of Salem, Tyner cottage, Nahant 
st. Neck; Alfred M. Walter of Chicago, III, Palmer 
cottage, Ocean ave., Neck; George E. Stephenson of 
soston, Russell cottage, Highland ave., Neck. 
A new summer residence completed since the close 
of last season on the inner shore of Marblehead Neck is 
the new stucco-finished home of Henry A. Morss of 
Brookline. It is the most charming residence on the 
upper shore and situated as it is between the Corinthian 
and Eastern Yacht clubs is well set off with its sur- 
roundings. It is two stories in height, with an Italian 
tile roof and stucco sides. A terrace sets off the grounds 
admirably, sloping down to the water’s edge. The new 
Morss residence is a trifle more decorative in appearance 
than many of those on the Neck shore and for this rea- 
son stands out prominently from the mainland. There 
is also a commodious garage to accommodate three 
inotors. 
SW AMPSCOTT’S summer colony will this summer be 
more accessible to tourists because of the widening 
and straightening of Humphrey street from Monument 
square, near the Lynn Shore drive, to Fishermen’s beach 
and Puritan road. The shore drive has always been 
kept in excellent condition owing to it being a section of 
state highway, but up to this spring the stretch of road 
to Puritan road has been an abomination to travel be- 
cause of its narrowness and lack of upkeep. This sea- 
son will see a broad, well macadamized street, making 
an excellent boulevard to the Swampscott and Beach 
Bluff hotels and summer residences. The street has been 
straightened and made into a 70-foot width. Land dam- 
ages amounting to more than $83,000 have been paid 
out of the county treasury to abuttors on the newly laid 
out highway. It is a welcome improvement to the 
Swampscott summer resort territory. 
Huncary Crizs Our for peace at any price. It 
may not be improbable that that nation will declare fe 
independence of Austria. Peace? There is no peace! 
Hungary is not the only nation that would welcome an 
armistice. 
