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| OPEN ALL THE YEAR ’ROUND | 
“HAP” WARD’S 
FERN-CROFT 
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Have you attended to your Thanks- 
giving Eve Reservation ? 
Wednesday Night, November 24, 1915 
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Mrs, Preston Gibson gave a box party last week at 
the National Theatre in Washington when the Boston 
Symphony gave the first concert of the season. Among 
her guests were Mrs. Stephen Slocum and Mrs. John 
Merriam. Others present who are well known on the 
North Shore were Miss Caroline Ogden Jones, Mrs. R. 
R. Hitt and Mrs, Reynolds Hitt. 
o % 
George Hoyle, a prominent mining man of Mexico, 
who died, Oct. 29, in St. Louis, was a nephew of Mrs. 
John Hays Hammond. Other relatives live in Washing- 
ton and St. Louis. 
3 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Perkins of Hamilton will 
open their house on Connecticut ave., Washington, about 
the middle of this month. 
Miss Isabella Hagner of Washington and Norman 
James of Baltimore were united in marriage last Tuesday 
at St. John’s church, the Rev. Roland Cotton Smith of- 
ficiating. _ Members of the Hagner family visited the 
Thomas P. Lindsays in Manchester the last summer. 
Among the guests present were the Third Assistant See- 
retary of State and Mrs, William Phillips. 
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Rey. William Lawrence Wood of Trinity Church, 
New York, son of Chalmers Wood of the Ipswich colony, 
officiated at a Lenox christening last week for the little 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hayden Channing of Boston 
and grand-daughter of Mrs. Frederick Schenck of New 
“ork. Sponsors were Mrs. Donald Gregg of Boston and 
Mrs. Hamilton Fish Benjamin and Frederick Schenck of 
New York. Mrs, Benjamin was the guest of Mr. and 
Mrs. David T. Dana while in Lenox. The little one was 
named Aleid Kathleen Channing. Mrs. Chalmers Wood 
of the Ipswich colony has returned to her home in New 
York from a visit with Mrs. Oscar lasigi of Boston at her 
Stockbridge home. 
oO 8 
Mr. and Mrs. Lydig otic the Beverly Cove col- 
ony were among the guests at the largely attended wed- 
ding in New York last Wednesday of Miss Marie Tailer 
and S. Bryce Wing. 
Mr. and Mrs. Eben Richards were of the North 
Shore residents who exhibited in the annual Tuxedo 
flower show last week-end in the Tuxedo club. 
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The Junior Leagues of Washington and Chicago so- 
ciety circles were organized last week. Mrs. Lowell M. 
Chapin of the Manchester-Magnolia colony is one of the 
young matrons in the Chicago League this winter. 
Nov. 12, 1915. 
— 
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CUT GLASS 
FE are offering as special values in cut glass — 
some new designs in water and grape juice 
sets. These consist of pitcher and six tumblers 
engraved with flower patterns. The grape juice set, 
which is equally serviceable for lemonade, iced 
tea, etc., is decorated with a grape design. 
‘These goods are remarkable values at the fol- 
lowing prices: 
Water Sets $3.50, $4.50 Grape Juice Sets $2.50 
F. S. Thompson, seweE.er 
164 Main Street, Gloucester 
< 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Sears, who were married 
last summer and were among the late-comers to the 
Shore, occupying one of the Dudley Pickman cottages 
at Beverly Cove, are now at Hot Springs, Va., where 
they joined Mrs. Sears’ mother, Mrs. Thomas Merrill of 
Duluth, Wis. 
Oo & 
Mrs. E. Prescott Rowe of the Magnolia colony has 
returned to her home in Longwood from a visit with her 
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Livingston of New 
York, who also spent part of the summer in Magnolia. 
Mr. and Mrs. B. Devereux Barker of the Marblehead 
Neck colony have returned to Boston after spending the 
past week-end at Tuxedo Park, N. Y., guests of Mr. and 
Mrs, Herman Vogel. 
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Mrs. James H. Beal and Mrs. William Beal of 
Nahant and Boylston A. Beal have returned to Boston 
from White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. 
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Miss Dorothy P. Potter of Philadelphia, who spent 
some time at the Oceanside and was also the guest cf 
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sheppard of Wenham the past 
summer, is noted among the recent arrivals at Hot 
Springs. 
Oo & 
Miss Marjorie McGowan of the Magnolia colony has 
been much entertained the past week in Detroit, the home 
city of her fiance, Buel Wetmore. A luncheon for fifty 
young people was given in her honor by Mrs. Charles B. 
Warren. She has since returned to her home at Indian- 
apolis. Mrs. McGowan and family have recently closed 
tneir Manchester cottage, after a long season, and return-. 
ed to Indianapolis. The marriage of Miss McGowan 
and Mr. Wetmore will take place this winter. 
o 8 O° 
Mrs. J. Harrington Walker of Magnolia and De- 
troit is spending the week in New York. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Stevens and Miss Jacquelin 
Stevens have closed their Pride’s Crossing home and after 
a short visit in New York have returned to their Grosse 
Pointe, Detroit, home. Miss Stevens and Julian H.~ 
Harris will be married Dec. 1. 
Magnolia friends of the Robert Graveses of New 
York will be interested in the announcement from Lenox 
of the marriage of Miss Hildegarde Louise Valentine to 
Ejleazer Deming Williams of Pittsfield. Mrs. Williams 
is a sister to Mrs. Robert Graves, Jr. The wedding took 
piace in Bennington, Vt., Sept, 16. 
