' -, :rf _ . ,.¢ vt-H N - ' “dl-~i -~ GHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN "*"‘“"""l"l"“*"‘ “ -"l'°' i' '*"`“’ "*~"“'”';~*~i""“"“‘ " PKGENINE' 4 ,_ E t d ~ i VIP ' " Asif ' ' ' ' - ' M _ A l ,_ di e V .§'ini'ce .Sloane 8 7: , 4 hew York, is known 4 _ tar and wide as s hard tdwn to spell _ ,V 4 é and M the h°m” °f scenery of the neighborhood. Miss Bai- ’ ' r master Samuel Pom- _ eroy Coit, 2d, ags ‘ _ '-\ four and one-halt I ': ii ni _ N years. Sammy"- "' - - "A 'tis thus that he is known-»hss done more to make Mamnro- ehild;-eu, neck famous than all the complicated and fickle suburban train schedules of the '°f ll" dllyl fl‘°l11 eflfly m0l'UiH§ Until ‘Now York, New Haven and Hartford elifly Wffiiiig, and their D“Sflm€B Us -Railroad, wwe-h is the only thing that her pastimes. She has three children, seems to care about going through Mama- roiieck without stopping and enjoying its wonderful beauties. i Master "Sammy" Coit is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell G. Colt, his mother in professional life being Miss Ethel ' Barrymore, the actress. "Saininy`s" father and mother live with him. This is u more truthfiii statement thou ap- pears. because sonn after Miss Barry- more’s first child was horn, on November 29, 1009, the litt'-1 feilow`s grnndfiither, f HELB enough for private golf courses; there are homes built at advantageous points, where the occupants may enioy the rymore’s home is to he classed with neither of these, yet one finds in the beautiful place in Tnylor's lane a 'greater spirit. for Miss Barrymoi-e's life in the summer is devoted exclusively to her It is with them that sho passes most “Sammy” heing the oldest; Miss Ethel B. Coit, horn May 1, 1912, and named for her mother, being the second, and Muster John Drew Coit, now eleven months old, named nfter his distin- guished ;;reatr‘»'l'l fm- put-it Bio-1 N. ¥. i FA Oiliili i20lE Barn-mare. --is tim dag a mn incoaai specimcn"" “Don‘t speak no loudly." replied Miss Bllfffmcrc in n. whisper. “He isn't, but he thinks lie ls." Gossip of the Sewing Circle. 4 levi-IR has there her.-ii a time when N the home di-essrnakor was so much in her element ns sho is to-day. And nr-ver has n lust yr>ur's truck been so easily siisgiilsed as n. this l‘enr's model an in this summer at iili-I, a season noted for ii# ~'1is_\' aids to _-'nrtnrlni smartness. Given a, fairly lzooil foundation of satin or silk, which may :inte hzicit it your or even two lor liirr-e, the home dressmnker can turn ou: at ti rlilii-iilnuely small expense a chic ilitle frock by the nhl of a new tunic. A if-ifria bulvm or any one of the fascina- tiiitt new hi-its in styles too numcraiis to mviitloii. 11-sails' it is foolish for the giri r-t’ small _rnenus to purchase new trucks this yeai'_ for with a ilitie iiiccniiity and n \’r'i‘y sinnii oiiti'i_\' of nionuy she Can fi! up ns snizirt it summer u'nx~iii~ohe its any one could wish from the remains of her last yi‘ui"s fiiitfit. For m.'ii\in:: r:i.'~~r last se.-i=nn'.s evening 'LT|'ii\'n ilivre :t"e ii dozen or nirirc expedient: li»i’i'oi‘cd to tlir- t-lever iieefilt-\\'o:nnn. If the i.~,i1\\'n i-i :ill \-.l. ie in chiffon. tulle or any other thin m'i‘i~zinl the addition of n tat- frtn. lmiero in i\i\_\' brilliant color-rose, tru'-en, turquoise blue. or orange-will cliunzc its style coieiplvtcly. Or pannlors perclxeil on the strziigiit line of I lirigrsril frm-k \vill lii.l»: its nld iilviiiity, the pmh~ it-in of il;-_~ ll;-fire helm: solved in this case by :\ ivirio i~iiii'li-d girdle of the some mn- tei-inl. (ir n .~a.~iii may be tied around the i to lfela sxispendirr |iiini<~_. iii hl\ir~ or iriitlai- color nilzl wliistl imimii limit the tunic is your own :dry 'miii‘liilir~rf l l’r-i'i\:\;~s the mast .=klli'ul device yet nl! -upon is tiiiit of ai certain clever homo ‘Ctrl-.