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, 
Telephone 24-12 
Rings 
Our assortment of fine 
rings is almost unlimited. 
Our catalog X illustrates over 
1600 rings. The book is yours 
for the asking. 
If you are thinking of buy- 
ing a ring, it will be very much 
to your interest to call or write 
for this catalog before making 
your purchase. We can please 
you in design; we can satisfy 
you in quality; and we can save 
you one-third of your purchase 
money. 
Our catalog just mentioned 
is a large book of 160 pages; 
it illustrates over 10,000 articles. 
It is a reliable guide to econom- 
ical shopping. 
Baird-North Co., 
250 Essex St., 
SALEM, MASS. 
Where your confidence 
is respected. 
Society Hotes 
Prominent among the North Shore 
contingent at Washington this winter are 
the Clarence Moores, who recently 
went there from  Pride’s Crossing. 
‘They have for the season the Blair Lee 
house on Pennsylvania ave., though they 
have bought a lot on Massachusetts ave. , 
very nearly opposite to Senator Lodge’s, 
and are beginning to build what promises 
to be a most magnificent mansion, to 
cost, so gossip says, with its furnishings, 
every bit of a million and a half. 
The Guy Normans are also prominent 
in Washington life again this season. 
‘They bought a house last year, it will be 
recalled, on the fashionable Massachusetts 
ave. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Walker have 
closed “‘Highwood,’’ their West Man- 
chester estate, temporarily, and moved 
to Boston this week, where they will 
spend a greater part of the winter with 
their son, Charles Walker, who has 
a town house at 7 Arlington street. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hopkinson, 
who are lingering quite late at their cot- 
tage in Manchester this fall, went to 
town yesterday to spend the holidays 
with Mrs. Hopkinson’s mother, Mrs. 
Greeley S. Curtis, and sisters, the Misses 
Curtis, at 28 Mt. Vernon st. ‘The latter 
closed ‘‘Sharksmouth,’’ at Manchester 
Cove, only a fortnight or so ago. 
Yachting Notes 
The work of building the new one-de- 
sign class of 15-footers, designed by 
Small Brothers for a number of Hull 
yachtsmen, will begin soon at White’s 
yard, Manchester. The designs are 
about ready for the builder and have 
been approved by the committee having 
the arrangements for the new class in 
hand. 
FE. H. Keep of New Orleans has pur- 
chased the racing yacht Manchester from 
Dr. J. L. Bremer of Manchester, and 
will race her under the flag of the South- 
ern Yacht club. “The Manchester won 
back the gold challenge cup from the 
Canadians in 1905, which had been taken 
away ten years previously. She was de- 
signed by E. A. Boardman of Manches- 
ter. [he boat was shipped from Man- 
chester Monday. Mr. Keep will change 
her name to Seawanhaka, as the name 
was not sold with the boat, the owner 
desiring to retain the appellation as the 
name for a craft that will represent his 
home town, Manchester, in the Sonder- 
klasse races next year. 
Gloucester is to have a new yacht club 
in the near future and it will have a home 
second to none on the coast if the plans 
at present under way are carried out. 
John Hays Hammond of the Fresh 
Water Cove colony has contributed 
$5000 asa nucleus fund for a building. 
REAL 
CHRISTMAS 
PRESENTS 
PICTURES 
STATUARY 
PHOTOGRAPHS 
FRAMES 
LOCKETS 
BRASSES 
POTTERY 
THE 
Phelps Studio 
73 MIDDLE ST., 
GLOUCESTER, = MASS. 
Just Remember 
We are headquarters 
for sensible and useful 
XMAS GIFTS. 
Men’s 
Holiday Shppers 
from 
bOGELOESD 1.00; 
Leggins, Overshoes 
and all such _ things. 
We sell a great many 
boots for gifts—dquite 
sensible, don’t you 
think? nf 
Forp & WaAss, 
Post-office Sq., | Gloucester. 
Next to Butman & French. 
