NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Mr. and Mrs. CHARLES HOYLE announce the Opening of their 
sl UO r.. 
Near the Hotel Hesperus, Flume Road, MAGNOLIA 
A Specialty is made of FINE PORTRAITS BY PHOTOGRAPHY. 
Special Attention is given to CHILDREN and PHOTOGRAPHING FAMILIES. 
Choice Assortment of HAND-CARVED FRAMES. 
Telephone: 54-2, Magnolia, Mass. 
EE EE SSS eee 
Society Notes 
Mrs. Louise L. Hopkins has had 
as her guest at Manchester through 
the week her sister-in-law, Miss 
Grace Hopkins of Brookline. Mr. 
Hopkins and Henry ~ Longfellow 
Dana of Magnolia were ushers ata 
pretty house wedding in Brookline 
Monday, when the former’s sister, 
Miss Helen Hopkins, was united in 
marriage to Mr. Avard Longley 
Dodge of Pasadena, Cal. Mr. and 
Mrs. Dodge will come to the North 
Shore in September before return- 
ing to California for a visit with 
Mr. and Mrs. Hopkins. 
General and Mrs. Draper arrived 
from Hopedale Thursday and are 
located at the George P. Field’s cot- 
tage at Manchester for the summer. 
The house has been practically re- 
built during the winter. 
Lewis W. Hill left Manchester in 
his private coach Thursday morning 
for St. Paul and the Pacific coast on 
a business trip in connection with 
the Great Northern railroad, of 
which he is vice president. 
Mr..and Mrs. W. H. Locke of 
Boston are registered at the Mas- 
conomo in Manchester for a short 
stay. Mr. Locke is connected with 
i eae Gowns 
French Millinery 
Automobile Veils 
Branch Store: 
©) 
TET. T. SLATTERY GO. 
the Collector of Port’s office, Bos- 
ton. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Strauss of 
Boston, Major Burns, Mr. and 
Mrs, J. H. Pratt, G. I. Day, A. Yon- 
son, Henry Barber of Newton Cen- 
tre, Mrs. Marion Estes, West Med- 
ford, Mr. and Mrs, F. E. Cosson- 
ger of New York were among those 
registered at the Masconomo in 
Manchester, this week. 
Included among the Sunday auto 
parties to the North Shore were 
Mr. and Mrs. J. H.. Hambly, Mr. 
and Mrs. Elliott Flint of Provi- 
dence, R. I., Walter Clifford and J. 
FE. Kelley of Fitchburg, Mr. and 
Mrs. W. P. Bond, Miss Ellen Bond 
and H. S. Bond of Boston, who 
made the Masconomo in Manches- 
ter their headquarters. 
Mrs. J. L. Bremer had as_ her 
house guest at Manchester over the 
week-end Mrs. Dr. Edward Wil- 
liams of Cambridge, who accom- 
panied Mr. and Mrs. Bremer down 
from town Saturday on the Vel- 
thra. 
Ironing by Electricity. 
The electric flat iron is a new de- 
parture from primitive ironing-day 
methods. Wherever it has been 
introduced, its convenience and effi- 
Imported Belts 
Leather Goods 
COLONNADES -- MAGNOLIA 
Jewelry 
White Serge and Linen Suits 
Now Open 
ciency have made it indispensable. 
An investment in an electric flat 
iron is a stroke of economy. The 
cost of operation is only a few cents 
per hour, and the saving in time 
and labor is remarkable. The elec- 
tric iron is always ready for use, 
and no time and strength are wasted 
in bothering with a stove or chang- 
ing irons, so that the time required 
to do the work is reduced—some- 
times 50 per cent. 
It has been figured out that a 
laundress averages two miles _ per 
day in walking back and forth be- 
tween ironing-board and _ stove. 
The time spent in this way by the 
workwoman represents also need- 
less waste of strength and loss of 
efficiency. — 
Electrically heated irons save 
these steps. They also banish the 
hot stove and with it much of the 
fatigue and annoyance of ironing. 
The Clark & Mills Electric Co., 
Postoffice Block, Manchester, have 
so much faith in the satisfactory 
qualities of electric flat irons that 
they offer a two weeks’ free trial of 
one or more irons. Tel. 146-5, Man- 
chester. < 
Wedding stationery, engraved 
cards and anything in the line of 
printing at The Breeze Office. * 
) 
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 
155 55 TREMONT ST. | 
Parasols 
Handkerchiefs 
| 
© 
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