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| OPEN :ALL THE YEAR ’ROUND | 
SHAP”?” WARD’S 
FERN-CROFT 
Mip OLE PORN INN ese 
Have you attended to your ‘Thanks- 
giving Kve Reservation? 
Wednesday Night, November 24, 1915 
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Mrs. William Hitt was a guest of Miss Margaret 
Wilson last week at the National theatre, Washington, 
when Miss Geraldine Farrar was the attraction at the 
concert. Others in the box party with Miss Wilson were 
Mrs. William G. McAdoo, Mrs. Norman Galt, Miss Helen 
Woodrow Bones and Mrs. Joseph Davies. Among other 
socially prominent people present was Mrs. Preston Gib- 
son. Later in the week a large and fashionable audience 
filled the Belasco theatre to hear the first concert of the 
season by the New York Symphony society. Mrs. Pres- 
ton Gibson was in the box belonging to Mrs. James Mc- 
Mullan, and her party included Mrs. George W. Vander- 
bilt, Mrs. George Houston, Mrs. Henry May and Miss 
Isabel May. Mrs. Philip McMillan is on from Detroit, 
Mich,, visiting at the McMillan home and was a member 
ot the box party of Mrs. Nicholas Anderson. Mrs, R. R. 
Hitt was in the box party of Gen. and Mrs. Williain 
Crozier. Mrs. Marshall Field also had a box party. 
When strict justice is done, each individual gets what 
he deserves, no more and no less, exactly. Mercy and 
pity lie outside the realm of justice and come out of 
other and higher relations between human beings. 
THE PHILADELPHIA Supper club which met last 
year at the Ritz-Carlton, New York, will resume its 
meetings tomorrow night. The club is under the direc- 
tion of Mrs. J. Hutchinson Scott, and will continue its 
meetings until Jan. 22. Among those on the committee 
in charge are Sydney Emlen Hutchinson, Dr, Charles D. 
Hart and Howard H. Henry. , 
The first meeting of the Radnor, Pa., Beagles was 
held last Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. 
OsHowardeClark. Jreat Devons = Clarencerti ws Clanicesu 
who recently married Miss Eleanor Townsend, is the 
master of the beagle pack. 
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Mrs. James Lowell Putnam of Boston is visiting in 
Philadelphia at the home of Mrs. Charles B. Wright. 
Dinners were given in her honor Tuesday and Thursday 
nights. 
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James B. Waller, Jr., of Coolidge’s Point colony and 
Chicago was one of the ushers at the recent wedding at 
Haverford, Pa., of Miss Lois Dempster Field, daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. M. Field and Lawrence A. Meeker 
of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Meeker were of the 
Chicago guests who motored through for the wedding. 
o 8 
Miss Gertrude L. Pancoast, daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. W. Howard Pancoast of Philadelphia is one of the 
Nov. 19, 1915. 
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 
season’s debutantes. Mrs. Alfred Pancoast of Philadel- 
phia spent the summer at the Oceanside hotel. Mrg. 
Timothee Adamowski (Gertrude Pancoast) was also 
ainong the cottagers in West Manchester where she and 
Mr. Adamowski spent the summer at the Clark cottage 
on the H. L. Higginson estate. St 
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If we were really neutral, no stigma would attach to 
any one who was pro-anything, German, French, Turkish, 
o1 Belgian. “ 
NEW YORK society had its formal opening last week 
with the big annual attraction—the Madison Square 
Garden horse show, Never before had the Garden been 
so beautifully decorated. ‘The effect was that of an Eng- 
lish garden, the work of Charles Slayter under the di- 
rection of Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury. Mrs. Stotesbury 
was the hostess, in a way, of the vast entertainmené. 
Many registrations at the hotels during the week are cf 
interest to the North Shore. Mr. and Mrs. Sydney E. 
Hutchinson were at the Waldorf-Astoria. Mr. and Mrs. 
Childs Frick were at the Ritz-Carlton: Others in New 
York were Mr. and Mrs. Leonard C. Hanna of Cleve 
land, O. Mrs. Hanna spent some time at Pride’s Cross- 
ing this summer with her daughter, Mrs. Paul Moore 
(I'anny Hanna) of New York and Convert, N. J. 
Miss Doris Piciehens Rene who is staying in New 
York, was a guest at the large dinner and theatre box 
party which Mrs. Herbert Shipman gave last Thursday 
night for Miss Madeleine L. Carey, the debutante daugh- 
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic F. Carey of New York. 
o 8% 0 
Amory G. Hodges of Beverly Farms and New York 
and president of the Harvard club, was one of the repre- 
sentatives of various colleges and societies present at the 
all-week festivities in honor of the housewarming of the 
New York Yale club, a fine 22-story building on Vander- 
bilt avenue and Forty-fourth street. 
The keynote of Christianity is not justice, but mercy. 
Its rule is not duty, but service. 
HE DETROIT, Mich., Junior League numbers among 
its members Miss Mary Margaret Walker of Mag- 
nolia, Miss Marion Hawks of Wingaersheek Beach, and 
Miss Annette Shelden, who spent part of the summer 
with her aunt, Mrs. Charles B. Pike at West Manchester. 
These young ladies will wear costumes in the fashion 
fete next Wednesday in the ball room of Hotel Ponchart- 
rain. Mrs. Jerome H. Remick is one of the patronesses. 
‘The League will use the proceeds to open a lunch raom 
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