SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sears Lovering (Mary Eliot) 
are receiving congratulations on the arrival of a young 
son to join their happy family circle at their year-round 
home off Beach street, Manchester. The little chap was 
born Tuesday, Jan. 19. The other two children are 
irls. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Goodrich of Boston and 
West Manchester, are receiving congratulations up- 
on the birth of their second child, a daughter, in the 
early part of last week. The first child is a son. 
Norman Prince, son of Frederick H. Prince, who 
has a fine country place, Princemere, at Wenham, has 
gone to France where he will enlist in the French 
aviation corps. While aviation was in its infancy 
young Prince took up the sport and had one of the 
first successful demonstrations of a flying machine at 
Chebacco pond, where the Princes own _ property 
which border on the shore. He has taken up operat- 
‘ing aeroplanes under the guidance of some of the 
best known experts in the country and will be given 
a pilot’s commission in the French army. The 
Princes have a place at Pau in the south of France 
where they usually spend the winter, but owing 
to the war, did not go over this season. They are 
prominent in the hunting set in Pau and have many 
friends in France. 
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Col. John Caswell, for many years a Pride’s 
Crossing summer colonist and a prominent Myopia 
man, is to enlist in the French army, where he will 
be given an officer’s commission. Col. Caswell ‘s 
well known locally through his connection with the 
state militia where he served as inspector of small 
arm practice. He is keenly interested in military 
affairs and recently returned from a stay abroad. He 
has many friends along the North Shore who will 
follow with interest his career in the army of the 
Allies. 
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A vastly successful ballet ‘‘Sylvia,’’ was given 
Tuesday afternoon, at the Boston Opera House 
under the auspices of the Ways and Means Com- 
mittee of the Massachusetts Equal Suffrage Associa- 
tion for the equal benefit of the Association and of the 
Red Cross Society. Among the North Shore women 
who had boxes were: Mrs. Franklin Haven, Mrs. A. H. 
Higginson, Mrs. R. G. Shaw, Mrs. Oliver Ames, Mrs. R. 
D. Evans, Mrs. Q. A. Shaw, and Miss Louisa P. Loring. 
Miss Eleanor Fabyan has concluded a delightful 
Visit in Baltimore with Miss Ruby McCormick, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William G. McCormick of 
504 Cathedral street, and is again at her home in 
Boston. The latest of the many pleasant social 
events which Miss Fabyan attended as the house 
quest of Miss McCormick was the bachelor’s cotil- 
lion, Monday night, when the Boston debutante was 
1auch sought after, 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, February 5, 1915 
No. 6 
SOCIETY NOTES 
At the annual meeting of the Manchester Yacht 
club in Boston last week the following officers were 
elected: Gordon Abbott, commodore; Francis W. Fabyan, 
vice-commodore; F. M. Whitehouse, rear commodore; 
Arthur M. Merriam, secy. and treas.; Alfred C. Needham 
and Thomas Taylor, Jr., members of the Executive com- 
mittee; Henry S. Grew, Ingersol Amory, Chas. E 
Hodges, Roger L. Putnam .and Chas. K. Cummings, 
Regatta committee. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Samuel D. Warren, (Helen Thomas) 
who went to Carpinteria, California, some time ago on 
account of Mr. Warren’s health, expect now to return 
to Boston, on the first of March. 
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Invitation Day will be observed tomorrow, instead 
of February 13, at the New Riding Club. At Member’s 
Day last week were a number of North Shore people, 
some of whom participated in the horse show. Mrs. 
Roger W. Cutler (Leslie Bradley) won the cup offered 
in the tandem class by Charles A. Stone; Miss Frances 
Bradley, her sister, won several ribbons in the riding 
and saddle classes. 
Mr. and Mrs. John 8. Curtis, who have been at 
Chestnut Hill since leaving Beverly Farms, are plan- 
ning to move into their Spruce street, Boston, home 
early this month. The house which was formerly 
the home of Mr. Curtis’ mother, the late Mrs. Hall 
Curtis, has been rebuilt from the foundation in the 
colonial style of architecture. 
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Final among the January weddings was that last 
Saturday of Miss Esther Parkman Turner and 
Laurence W. Morgan, which took place at noon in 
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, in Brookline. The bride 
is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Turner of 
Chestnut street, Brookline. Her engagement to Mr. 
Morgan was announced early last July. She made 
her debut in the winter of 1913 quietly, as the 
family was in bereavement, although later a dance 
in her honor was given. Mr. Morgan, who is the son 
of George M. Morgan of Boston, who now lives at 
Hotel Somerset, is a graduate of Harvard, with the 
class of 1910, Like his father, he belongs to The 
Country club, the Essex County club and_ the 
Union Boat club. Mr. Morgan’s best man was _ his 
future brother-in-law, Oliver Turner of Beverly 
Farms, who married Miss Marie Lee. The group of 
ushers was made up of Austin B. Mason, Harvard, 
1908, and who is a graduate of Tech, class of 1910; 
Sullivan A. Sargent, Jr., classmate of the bridegroom, 
Harvard, 1910; G. Davenport Hayward, Harvard 
1912, and Robert Williams, to represent Boston ; 
with Norman Harrower of Worcester and Clarence 
Clarke of Philadelphia. At the close of the service 
at the church a small reception was held at the home 
of the bride’s parents, who assisted the bridal couple 
in welcoming the guests. Mr. Morgan and_ his 
bride will join the colony of young married people 
at Beverly Farms, where they will live after May 1. 
