NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Apples for Sale 
BALDWINS, strickly hand-picked. Price 
$2.50 a barrel. No. 2, $1.50. Apply to 
ROBT. A. MITCHELL. 
Cor. School and Pleasant Sts. 
Manchester. 
GEO. P. CARVER, 
CIVIL ENGINEER 
184 Cabot St., Beverly, Mass, 
11-17-52 Telephone 24-12 
11-17-? 
Christmas 
shopping 
In our line we offer you a 
choice that exceeds the stock 
of any retail jeweler in Boston. 
We have in stock hundreds of 
Scarf Pins, Brooches, Rings, 
a nice selection in the most 
popular Bracelet designs, Fine 
Back Combs with solid gold 
mountings. 
We have almost anything 
you could possibly want in 
Toilet Ware; we also have the 
sensible and useful gift s— 
Table Ware, Carvers, Cut 
Glass, Bread and Butter Plates 
in fine china. We won’t con- 
tinue; we'll just ask you to 
call and see for yourself. 
_ Balrd-North Co., 
250 Essex St., 
SALEM, MASS. 
Open every evening next 
week. 
Society Hotes 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Whitehouse 
returned the first of this week from an 
auto tour down though Connecticut and 
New York to Lakewood where they re- 
mained a few days. They left the shore 
several weeks ago in time for the Har- 
vard~Yale game at New Haven. ‘They 
will spend the winter at their Manchester 
estate, with the exception of a week or 
two at their shooting box in the South 
after the holidays, and will probably go 
abroad in the spring. 
Mr. and Mr. Andrew Carnegie, 2d, 
closed ‘“Seawold,’’ at Manchester Cove, 
‘Thursday, and have gone to their winter 
home in Fernandina, Fla. 
Miss Frances H. Stearns was down 
the shore last Friday looking over her 
property at Magnolia, and making plans 
for some minor improvements and 
changes at the Grille club and ““The 
Villa.’’ Yesterday Miss Stearns left 
Boston, where she has been stopping at 
the Hotel Lenox since returning to town, 
and went over to New York, where she 
is registered for a month or more at the 
Prince George. She is planning to sail 
on February 4, on the Deutchland for 
Naples, whence she will go to Sicily 
and perhapsto Africa, Paris and London, 
returning about May 1. 
This week saw the opening of the 
debutante season at Boston, which is to 
be a particularly gay one this year. A 
number of North Shore girls are to be 
given coming out parties of more or less 
prominence. On Wednesday evening 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Bradley of the 
Prides colony presented their daughter, 
Rosamond Bradley, at a ball at the 
Somerset, the event proving one of the 
smartest given there this season. 
Harry Curry, son of Mrs. H. M. Curry 
of the Magnolia summer colony, had a 
narrow escape last Friday morning in the 
fire which destroyed the Chi Psi fraternity 
house of Cornell University, at Ithaca, 
N. Y., in which three students and three 
firemen died. Mr. Curry, who is a 
student at Cornell, was among the injured. 
He was cut about the hands and his face 
was burned. Mr. Curry was rescued by 
Horace Halliday, former captain of the 
football team, who climbed a ladder and 
by means of a rope succeeded in lowering 
himself to a window where he rescued 
the unfortunate young man. ‘The fire 
started at 3.30 a. m. ‘There were 27 
students in the building, which was worth 
$200,000, and was said to be one of the 
finest ‘“frat’’? houses in the country. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry S. Grew are to 
have with them for part of the holidays, 
at their 89 Beacon st., Boston, home, their 
daughter, Mrs. J. Pierpont Morgan, jr., 
and Mr. Morgan, who arrived from 
Europe a few days ago. 
REAL 
CHRISTMAS 
PRESENTS 
PICTURES 
STATUARY 
PHOTOGRAPHS 
FRAMES 
LOCKETS 
BRASSES 
POTTERY 
THE 
Phelps Studio 
/S2MIDDLE SI. 
GLOUCESTER, - MASS. 
}Our 
Manchester 
Patrons 
Are reminded that we 
shail be open evenings, 
beginning Wednesday, 
December 19th, until 
after Christmas. 
“| Come in and see our 
really good values 
“| Lot of things suitable 
for Christmas giving. 
Forp & WaASss, 
Post-office Sq., | Gloucester. 
Mext to Butman & French. 
