ee F NORTH SSH. RE BE Rie 
Dee. 8, 1916. 
We are offering an unusual collection of 
PERENNIAL PLANTS 
And a choice lot of Conifers. 
NORTH SHORE NURSERIES & FLORIST CO., Beverly Farms 
F. E. COLE, Prop. 
Telephone, Beverly Farms 43 
We shall be better prepared than usual to store plants for the winter. 
HE A.iiep Bazaar will open in Boston on Saturday, 
Dec. gth, and closes on Wednesday, Dec. 20th. The 
restaurant at the Bazaar should be patronized by all and 
it is hoped the out-of-town shoppers will make it a point 
to take luncheon or dinner there. Charles K. Cummings 
of Pride’s Crossing and Boston, is chairman of the com- 
mittee. Other members representing the North Shore 
are Mrs. Harcourt Amory, Mrs. Robert S. Bradley, Miss 
Helen Burnham, Mrs. Charles E. Cotting and Mrs. W. 
B. Thomas. One of the features of the restaurant is an 
oyster counter where one may be served the best oysters, 
opened on the spot “while you wait.” Another attraction 
will be the Waffle Booth. Waffles made by an experi- 
enced cook, served piping hot! The large restaurant 
will be open from 11 a. m. to 11 p.m. Tables for dinner 
can be engaged in advance. Joseph Sheehan, the steward 
of the Union club, has given his services for the entire 
time and has charge of the restaurant. Donations of 
money: and food have been very generously donated by 
provision dealers, grocers, ice-cream firms, Boston Ice 
Co. and others too numeruos to mention. In spite of all 
this the expenses are heavy and it is only by a liberal 
patronage of the public that the restaurant can make a 
good showing in the net returns. 
° 
Mrs. Samuel Gaibereon of Manchester and Louis- 
ville, Ky., has shown her interest in the Allied Bazaar, by 
sending a large Christmas fruit cake to the Restaurant 
committee. The cake will be raffled and will be found 
on a table near the Waffle Booth on the balcony outside 
the restaurant. 
Oo 8 «90 
Philadelphia will have a notable bazaar tableaux on 
the evening of Dec. 16, at the Ritz-Carlton. Among 
those taking part will be Mrs. Gurnee Munn (Marie 
Louise Wanamaker), who will impersonate “Peace”; Gur- 
nee Munn, “Scotland,” and Charles A. Munn, Jr., will be 
“Italy.” This will close the “Made-in-America” bazaar 
given by the Emergency Aid. 
In Washington the Bla Leiter residence has been 
opened this season. It stands in Du Pont Circle and has 
been closed since the death of Mrs. Levi Z. Leiter, sev- 
ral years ago. Her son’s family, the Joseph Leiters, 
who formerly occupied their country estate on the Poto- 
mac, opened the old mansion on their return from Bev- 
etly Farms in October, and it was there that their baby 
daughter was born a few weeks ago. The baby has been 
named Nancy for Mr. Leiter’s sister, Mrs. Colin Powys 
Campbell. 
Some families are so old they have become monoton- 
ous.—Detroit Free Press. 
A poor man served by thee shall make thee rich; a 
sick man helped by thee shall make thee strong, thou 
shalt be served thyself by every sense of service which 
thou renderest —E. B. Browning. 
Breuities 
How beautiful it is to be alive!—H. S. Sue 
One of Washington’s most invaluable characteristics 
was a faculty of bringing order out of confusion. 
Literature would pay better, if there were not so 
many dead men still in the business. 
Be but faithful, that is all—Arthur Hugh Clough. 
It is easier to change a man’s creed than his manners. 
—Margaret Deland. 
There’s naught in this bad world like sympathy.— 
Byron. 
Let us be content, in work, 
To do the things we can, and not presume 
To fret because it’s little. 
—E. B. Browninc. 
A good temper, like a summer day, is the sweetener 
of toil and soother of disquietude. It sheds a brightness 
over everything. 
He (of Yale team)—Yes, our family dates back to 
the Normans. Blue blood counts for something. 
She—It won’t count much with pa; he’s a Harvard 
man. 
“T was fool enough to tell that doctor of yours that 
you sent me.’ 
“Why, what happened?” 
“He demanded his fee in advance.” 
He—Of course there’s a big difference between a 
botanist and a florist. 
She—Is there really? 
He—Yes; a botanist is one who knows all about 
flowers, and a florist is one who knows all about the price 
people will pay for them. 
Riches are chiefly good because they give us time.— 
Charles Lamb. 
A girl was required to write a brief sketch of Queen 
Elizabeth. Her paper contained this sentence: 
“Elizabeth was so dishonest that she stole her soldiers’ 
food.” 
The teacher was puzzled, and called the girl. 
“Where did you get that notion?” 
“Why, that’s what it says in the history.” 
The book was sent for, and the passage was found. 
Tt read: 
“Elizabeth was so parsimonious that she even pinched 
her soldiers’ rations.’—Tit-Bits. 
