~ Oct. 29, 1915. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 5 
| OPEN ALL THE YEAR ‘ROUND | 
“HAP” WARD’S 
FERN-CROFT 
ahem." | | "PHONE | 
| MASS. INN DANVERS 45 
Have you attended to your Hallowe’en 
Reservation ? 
Monday Night, November 1, 1915 
aoe iINS ED iN N-- 
The North Shore is well represented these balmy 
October days at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., where 
many of our summer folk are spending the autumn. 
‘Knitting for the soldiers is occupying many who sit on 
the lawns these warm days and enthusiastically knit gray 
and khaki colored socks for the soldiers of the allied 
armies and for the Poles. It is thought that if Mme. 
Paderewski would bring her collection of Polish dolls to 
the Springs that she would meet with great success in 
their sale. Good times are being enjoyed out on the 
inountain trails, and in these riding parties have been 
seen Miss Corinna Searle and Miss Elizabeth Burrage, 
Mrs. Lawrence Armour and Leonard C. Hanna, Jr. The 
mountain roads attract many driving parties. 
party that came over from Hot Springs for luncheon 
mete Mrs. Amory A. Lawrence, Mrs. Francis Henry 
Appleton, Mrs. Nathan Matthews, Mrs. Harry Hall and 
Philadelphia and New York friends. Mrs. Joseph B. 
Widener of Philadelphia, who has recently bought Rough 
Point, one of the finest of the Newport estates, is also 
at the Springs. The Newport home formerly belonged 
to Mrs. Wm. B. Leeds and consists of a stone villa and 
extra large lawns. At the Greenbrier hotel is an interest- 
ing bridal party. It is here that Miss Katherine Jones 
of Lake Geneva, Wis., and St. Augustine, Fla., who spent 
the summer at Pride’s Crossing with her sister, Miss 
Helen Jones and brother, Edgecomb Lee Jones,-is spend- 
ing the autumn. On Sept. 25, Miss Jones was married 
in New York to W. Jennings Ormonde of New York, 
and after a trip to the White Mountains, they are now 
settled at the Springs for a few weeks. Others of the 
North Shore colony at the Springs are Mrs. Joseph 
Leiter, Mrs. John R. Williams and daughter, Miss Fran- 
cise Williams and Mrs. Preston Gibson. The Axel Wick- 
felds were there until called to Pride’s Crossing by the 
iliness and death of Mrs. Edwin C. Swift, the mother of 
Mrs. Wickfeld. 
Oo 8 
Chicago society has launched a new enterprise this 
week, and yesterday saw the opening reception of this 
much discussed and promising undertaking the Cordon 
club. The club is composed of women and is li~ited to 
400. It is full now, with a long waiting list. The pur- 
pose of the club is purely social, and its beautiful rooms 
decorated in the style of the Italian renaissance will af- 
ford a pleasant gathering place for luncheon or tea. 
Vriters, musicians, artists, actresses, business women, 
reformers, and women of wealth and leisure are mem- 
bers. Under the head of women having some profession 
or definite calling in life is entered the name of Mrs. 
Fiobart. Chatfield-Taylor as a bookbinder. Other promi- 
nent society people are entered as landscape gardeners, 
In an auto 
How About It? 
If your watch has been running constantly for the 
past two years the balance wheel has made 315,360,000 
oscillations. After doing this enormous amount of work 
it is only fair to your watch to have the dry oil and 
dirt removed and the movement put in order. 
To neglect it means wearing out of delicate parts, 
poor time-keeping and greater expense when you are 
compelled to have the work done. 
EF. S. Thompson, seweer 
164 Main Street, Gloucester 
SS 
painters, musical composers, etc. Among them we find 
such well-known names as the Armours, the McCormicks, 
Mrs. Potter Palmer, Ella Flagg Young and Jane Addams. 
Miss Frances Starr, the actress who visited the Dr. J. H. 
Lancashires the past summer is also a member. 
I 
Nelson S. Bartlett of Manchester, treasurer of the 
Infants’ Hospital, has sent a letter to Mrs. James M. 
Codman, treasurer of the Woman’s Anti-Suffrage asso- 
ciation of Massachusetts, thanking the association for a 
check for $1000 just received. The money was obtained 
from the sale of red roses. In his letter Mr. Bartlett 
said: “We are badly off for money, especially in view 
of the plan to open the other big ward, and run the hos- 
pital to its capacity.” 
% 
The marriage of Miss Elizabeth Wilder of Lowell, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. F. Wilder of Lowell, to 
Clement Denny Sargent, is of interest to North Shore 
people, owing to the fact Miss Wilder has been coming 
to the Oceanside, Magnolia, for many years, and be- 
cause Mr. Sargent lives in Swampscott in summer, being 
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Addis M. Whitney. The wed- 
ding will take place tomorrow (Oct 30) at 2.30 o’clock, 
at High Street church, Lowell. After a short wedding 
trip Mr. and Mrs. Sargent will live in the Whitney bunga- 
low at Swampscott, occupied the last summer by Mr. 
and Mrs. James S. Wiley (Miss Matilda Denny Sargent), 
the latter being Mrs. Whitney’s youngest daughter, who 
was married in May. 
o 3% 
The Rev. Wm. H. Dewart, rector of the “Old 
North” church, Salem st., Boston, who has been seriously 
ill for many weeks, is just beginning to be up and about 
again. His church has granted him leave of absence till 
Jan. rst, that his health may be quite restored. 
o & 
Dr. Charles W. Eliot will vote “no” on the woman 
suffrage amendment. This information is contained in 
a letter sent to Mrs. John Balch, president of the Wom- 
en’s Anti-Suffrage association. Referring to a news- 
paper statement which to the careless reader might seem 
to place him in the suffragist ranks, Dr. Eliot writes io 
Mrs. Balch: “I am proposing to vote ‘no’ on the refer- 
endum to Massachusetts male voters November next.” 
First Motorist (after very narrow shave)—But why 
all this fuss? We haven’t damaged you. You can’t 
bring an action against us. 
Second Motorist—I know I can’t, sir; I know I 
can’t; that’s just my point—Punch. 
