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The John R. MeGinleys of Pitts- 
burg planned to arrive at Manches- 
ter today. They are to occupy the 
Stevens cottage on Smith’s point. 
A Carnegie, 2d, and family are to 
come to their cottage at Manchester 
Cove within a few days. The ser- 
vants arrived the first of this week 
and the house has been put in readi- 
ness. 
T. Howard Lewis and family ar- 
rived Wednesday at the Pierce cot- 
tage at Old Neck, Manchester. 
Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Higginson and 
family are planning to sail from 
Kurope on June 8, and immediately 
after they arrive in this country, 
they will come to their summer 
home at Coolidge’s point, where 
they will spend the summer. Mrs. 
Higginson’s mother, Mrs. Lucius M. 
Sargent, will remain at her Boston 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
house, 315 Dartmouth street, until 
about the middle of June, when she, 
too, will come to Coolidge’s point 
to spend the balance of the summer 
with her father, Hon. T. Jefferson 
Coolidge. 
A Pittsburg policeman who looked 
so much like Taft that he was often 
taken for the President has gained 
undying fame by refusing to be the 
cuest of the chief executive to show 
off the similarity in looks. 
If you want the North Shore to 
erow and prosper, be sure and sound 
its praises wherever you may be. It 
certainly has many good points that 
will do to talk about, and if you 
advertise these, the bad ones will 
disappear. 
Politics cannot be the national 
game after all, because the papers 
say that the national game has hin- 
dered legislative business in Wash- 
ington. 
NOW CLOSING! 
The Next Edition of the TELEPHONE 
DIRECTORY closes on 
May 21, 1910 
If you desire to have your name appear 
in this book, you must give your order 
for Telephone Service AT ONCE. 
Call up, free of charge, or drop a postal to our Local Man- 
ager in your town and an Agent will be sent to visit you. 
New England Telephone 
and Telegraph Company 
a 
LONDON’S SENSATION. 
‘‘The Baggage of Fortune’’ Will Be 
a Great Treat of Globe Readers— 
Will Begin in Friday’s Issue. 
‘‘The Baggage of Fortune,’’ which: 
will begin in the Boston Daily Globe 
Friday, May 20, is the story sensa- 
tion of all London, where it is ap- 
pearing in the Daily Mail. The Bos- 
ton Globe has bought the. New 
England rights and thus secured a 
ereat treat for its readers. To sum- 
marize the fascinations of this re- 
markable serial would be impossible. 
The principal characters are two 
multimillionaires, who, having made 
their fortune in the United States, 
transfer the scene of their terrific 
financial rivalry to London, They 
master the market, but it is war to 
the knife between them. Seeming 
advantage comes to one when his 
rival is reported to be at the point 
of death. The market is all excite- 
ment. The financial world is shaken. 
Then the dying financier sends for 
his hated enemy. 
The latter is ushered into the pres- 
ence of the dying man. What hap- 
pens then is the real beginning of the 
story. Do not fail to read it. You 
will say it is the most startling open- 
ing of a story you ever read. 
Whatever baggage you discard, be 
sure to get ‘‘The Baggage of For- 
tune.’’ Begin it in the Boston Globe 
Friday. It will rivet your at- 
tention as no story ever did before. 
Another Daily Globe feature of 
great interest is the series of letters 
by William E. Curtis, the famous 
traveler and correspondent. The 
Globe prints every day a letter from 
Mr. Curtis, who is making a remark- 
able tour along the Dalmatian coast, 
and among’ the strange peoples of 
the Balkan states, Asia. Minor and 
Turkestan. 
The Boston Daily Globe is not only 
a great newspaper, but is as well an 
excellent magazine, filled with sto- 
rier and pictures, puzzles and poetry, 
information for housekeepers, letters 
from girls and women, and some- 
thing for all, old and young. 
The road to wealth is small in size, 
To get there you must advertise. 
No better medium ean be found 
than the North Shore Breeze, which 
goes into the homes of the people 
you want to reach with your an- 
nouncement. 
Most people act like a dunce when 
they feel like a king. 
Temper is the only thing that 
doubles by being lost. 
