12 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Last Sale 
of 
Summer Dresses 
Suits and Waists 
Prices Very Low 
yee 
ADY ABERDEEN 
ditions in Ireland. Some 200 people from all parts of 
the North Shore attended the reception which Mrs. Johu 
Hays Hamyond gave to Lord and Lady Aberdeen, who 
are spending a few weeks at Marblehead, and the occa- 
cion was one of the most brilliant of the many that have 
been given by Mrs. Hammond at her summer home. At 
the close of the reception, which was held in the large 
ha'l, Lady Aberdeen spoke to those present from the 
rozthern porch of the house on conditions in Ireland 
where for many years Lord Aberdeen was the repre- 
sentative of the British Government and following her 
remarks Lord Aberdeen spoke very briefly, both of them 
being very charmingly introduced by Mrs. Hammond. 
Lady Aberdeen’s talk was most informal. She told 
of the appoint rent of her husband by Gladstone in 1884 
as Viceroy of Ireland, of her going to the island a 
stranger, and of her intimate touch with the people. Not- 
withstanding that two-thirds of the country has been pur- 
chased from landlords and given over to the people as 
farm holdings, much remedial legislation was needed. 
Some 50,000 cottages had been built for the people 
by the Congested District Bureau, but although all through 
the countryside there were evidence of marked progress 
the people were not satisfied. Their aspirations and their 
ideals of nationality were not realized. She believed a 
large part of the trouble to be due to the fact that the 
i nglish are, as a whole, incapable of understanding the 
Irish temperament. She praised Redmond and Dillon 
and 150,000 brave Irish boys who were fighting in the 
trenches. Many of the cottage industries, such as lace- 
making, had been hit hard by the war, and she asked the 
ladies present to inquire for Irish goods of their store- 
keepers and thus help these people. : 
Lord Aberdeen complimented Mrs. Hammond on 
her interest and advancement of the humanitarian work 
among the Irish people. 
Later in the afternoon tea was served in the large 
dining roon. The house was brilliantly decorated with 
great bunches of dark red gladioli and the grounds were 
Special Tree Work 
Moth Work, Spraying 
: Tree Surgery :: :: 
: ‘Cavity Work ::4.. 
Fertilizing, Pruning, etc. 
D. Corliss & Co. 
Gloucester 
Ww. 
Telephone 
gave an informal talk last Satur- 
day afternoon at ‘Lookout Hill,’ Gloucester, on con- 
Sept. 1, 1916. 
723 Boylston Street 
Boston 
TELEPHONE 2526 
BACK BAY 
aVV 
looking their best with their immense bushes of hardy 
hydrangea in full bloom, and the hardy phlox and other 
fall flowers. Several ponds with running water and foun- 
tains were filled with pond lilies. 
on Oo 
Rev. Henry H. Saunderson of the Unitarian associa- 
tion will preach Sunday, Sept. 3d., at the First Unitarian 
church, Masconomo st., Manchester. Service at II 
o’clock. 
o 8 O° 
Rev. Laurence Hayward of the First Religious so- 
ciety (Unitarian), Newburyport, will preach Sunday, 
Sept. 3d., at the Union Chapel, Magnolia. Services at 
10.45; all seats free. 
oO 8 OO 
Rev. Samuel McComb, D.D., Canon of the Cathe- 
dral, Baltimore, will take the service at Emmanuel Epis- 
copal church. Masconomo st., Manchester, Sunday, Sep- 
tember 3. There will be a sermon an celebration of the 
Holy Communion at half-past ten o’clock. 
; oR GO 
Mr. and Mrs. Laurance H. Armour, who have been 
guests of Pay-Director and Mrs. Charles W. Littlefield at 
their cottage on Smith’s Point, Manchester, have left by 
automobile for a trip through the lake country of New 
York. Mrs. Frank May and Miss Josephine Chapin of 
Chicago, who are guests of Captain and Mrs. Littlefield 
at present will shortly leave for Lenox and Coopertown. 
Mrs. Littlefield’s daughter, who before her marriage was 
Miss Mary Armour, will shortly arrive with her husband, 
James Clement Dunne, of New York. 
o 8 9 
Mr. and Mrs. James Routledge of San Antonio, 
Texas, are among the delightful people from that section 
of the country spending the summer on the North Shore. 
They are in the Land’s End section of Rockport. Mrs. 
Routledge was Frances Smith before her marriage. Mr. 
Routledge is an attorney. 
Ope oH AS: 
Miss Helen Cannon and Miss Virginia Leseure, 
daughter and granddaughter of “Uncle Joe” Cannon, are 
spending a few weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob 1. Loose 
at Eastern Point, Gloucester. H. J. Luce and Walter 
Merrall of New York were recent week-end guests of 
Mr. and Mrs. Loose. 
JOHN J. 
CURRAN 
GENUINE OLD ANTIQUES 
from fifty to one-hundred years old 
Japanese Carved Chest, Chair and Settle, Chippen- 
dale Mirror, Grandfather’s English Clock, Tables, 
Chairs and Sofas, Old Pictures and- Mirrors. 
3141B WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON 
TELEPHONE 52706 JAMAICA PLAIN 
GENUINE ANTIQUES 
While being near Boston it will pay you wellto visit my shop with 
its large and fine Collection of Genuine Antique Furniture, 
Andirons, Mirrors and Clocks at reasonable prices 
a 
S$. 4G S ee 
76 CHARLES STREET, 
BOSTON 
