28 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
OILZUM 
LUBRICATING OILS 
Our new OILZUM electric sign, a reproductien on a smaller scale of the OILZUM electric sign at our Boylston 
Street Store, reminds you that this CREAM OF MOTOR OILS is constantly at your service and can be 
procured from us in one or five-gallon cans or in barrel lots 
Lubricating oil is the smallest item of upkeep in running a car, so don’t fool yourself by buying an oil because it is 
cheap, you should know what it means,—abuse to your motor, carbon trouble and then the repair shop 
If your motor could speak, we would not have to advertise OILZUM 
GREEN & SWETT COMPANY 
Boston Store - 
Tel. 182 
MANCHESTER, MASS. 
737 Boylston St. 
que North Shore is still recognizing the importance of 
Thé Dansants at Magnolia. The artists, and the 
crowd and the music and the tea have caught the coast 
in a spell of gaiety that submerges everything else on 
Fridays. The tables are ordered on one Friday for the 
next and the enthusiasm grows with the expectation of 
seeing new variations of the everlasting trot interpreted by 
new dancers each time. Miss Judson and Mr. Chidney 
arrived this time with any number of new ideas for 
trotters and the Saturday night dance revealed several 
to have taken hold and to have grown into efficiency. 
New possibilities are discovered for ragtime chimes every 
day and Dansant Fridays are an entertaining guide to 
the variety of steps discovered to date. Mrs. Nicholas 
Longworth was important in the attendance, smartly 
gowned in white tailored whip cord and white tailored 
hat. Among those who entertained were Mrs. George 
Lewis four guests; Miss Manuela de Pena had a table 
for four; Spencer Kennard one for six guests; Mrs. 
Verner of Pittsburg entertained four; Mrs. Rantoul of 
3everly Farms entertained six; Miss Irene Pattison of 
Superior, Michigan, 6; Miss Myra Helmar, woman golf 
champion of Chicago, entertained three; Mrs. M. B. 
Wendell of Boston, 4; Mrs. Edgar Newbold of New 
York, 4; Mrs. John K. Shaw of Baltimore, 6; Mrs. Char- 
les P. Stone of Washington, 7; Mrs. Leonard C. Hanna 
of Cleveland, 6; Mrs. R. H. Dupee of Boston, 4; Miss 
Charlotte Lane of New York, 4; Mrs. Edward Harlow of 
Salem, 5; Mrs. Geo. Wallace of Boston, 6; Mrs. F. H. 
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LAMSON & HUBBARD 
Will Display in 
Maenolia 
SMITH BUILDING LEXINGTON AVE. 
A Magnificent Line of Latest Paris Fashions 
Fur Coats, Fur Sets, Fur Hats, and 
Fur Trimmed Evening Wraps :: :: 
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Martin of Providence, 5; Miss M. E. Hobart of Phil- 
adelphia, 2; Mrs. A. H. Morse of Boston, 6; Mrs. E. C. 
Roberts of Philadelphia, 6; Mrs. R. H. Robinson, 5; 
Mrs. Wm. A. Tucker, 2; Mrs. Charles Kohler of New 
York, 4; Miss Elenor Bradley of Brookline, 5; Mrs. 
Wm. E. Williamson of Quincy, Ill., 6; Mrs, David Loring 
of Boston, 4; Mrs. C. H. Wilcox of New York, 3; Mrs. 
Geo. W. Hewett of Burlington, N. Y., 4; Mrs. Morris 
Dallett of Phila., 4; Miss Helen Fairbanks of Terre 
Haute, Ind., 2; Mrs. Percival Smith, 4; J. P. Worster 
Lambert, 2, and Frank de Long, 4. 
oR 
One of the most popular places this summer for 
games of auction, with luncheon afterwards, is at the lit- 
tle Wenham ‘Tea-House (The Sign of the Tea-Kettle and 
the Tabby Cat). The quiet simplicity of the place seems 
to appeal to many, and among those who have entertained 
there this month are, Mrs. J. Grafton Minot of Beverly 
Farms, Miss Maud Sturges, Mrs. C. E. Cotting, Mrs. 
G. H. O. Colby, Mrs. Reginald Fitz of Manchester, 
Mrs. Harrington and Mrs. Higinbotham of Ipswich, Mrs. 
Geo. Whitney, Mrs. Homer Richardson and Mrs. P. L, 
R. Ely of Nahant, Mrs. John A. Burnham and Mrs. A. M. 
Kidder of Wenham. ‘Tuesday is the morning especially 
set aside by the T'ea-House for these auction bridge lunch- 
eons, and tables may be had by applying to the manager, 
Miss Chamberlin; telephone Hamilton 45. * 
Experience is the name men give to their follies, or 
their sorrows.—A. de Musset. 
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