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NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Vol. XIV 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, March 31 
No. 13 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
r GPRING has arrived. Every day the warming air brings 
are to be found everywhere. 
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with it the promise of budding trees and gree’ grass. 
Infallible signs of the most beautiful season of the year 
People are beginning to 
clean up their yards of the debris accumulated during 
- the winter and bared by the disappearing snow. 
In a few weeks the summer season along the North 
_ Shore will be in swing with all the vigor of former years 
and it is generally prophesied that in many respects the 
season will be the best in years. Numerous reasons are 
given why this season should surpass all previous years. 
The principal one, however, and the most logical is that 
business generally has been very good and everybody 
has money to spend for the summer vacation. ‘his will 
be particularly true of the people who have in other years 
frequented the North Shore in summer and who for the 
past two years stayed away because of the general busi- 
ness depression. These people will flock to the seashore 
this year in droves. 
Following its usual custom the NortH SHORE BREEZE 
will don is summer attire at the opening of the season. 
The size of the paper will be nearly doubled and many 
attractive features will be added for the summer season. 
Pictures of the beauty spots of the North Shore will play 
a big part in adding tone to splendid descriptive articles 
which will appear. 
The first summer number of the NortH SHoRE 
BREEZE this year will appear on Friday, April 14th. 
Thousands of additional copies of the issue are to be 
mailed all over the country to prospective summer resi- 
dents of the North Shore. In an attractive manner it 
will set forth the advantages of the North Shore as a 
vacation spot. Its pages will breathe an invitation to the 
former summer residents and a welcome to those who 
have never had the pleasure of a summer on our coast. 
Merchants of all kinds, hotel and real estate men are in- 
vited to take advantage of this unusual opportunity to 
reach so large a number of former and prospective vaca- 
tionists by making their announcements directly through 
the columns of the NortTH SHORE BREEZE. 
Any merchant interested in this chance to reach pro- 
spective customers with advance announcements, who 
does not receive a visit from our representative before 
the week of the issue, may have further information re- 
garding this remarkable opportunity by dropping us a 
card, or reaching us by telephone. 
Fortunate is the man who succeeds in penetrating the 
disguise of his blessings. 
It is said that America is to have some sort of 
“Oberammergauer” plays. Walter Damrosch and Mr. 
Harrison, president of the Southern Railway, are those 
chiefly interested. Black Mountain, in North Carolina, 
is the place chosen for the plays and an auditorium seat- 
ing 8,000 will soon be erected. Performances will be 
held every year instead of every ten years, and will begin 
on August 15. 
Mrs. J. Brooks Fenno has been joined at White 
Sulphur Springs, W. Va., by Mr. Fenno and their son, 
J. Brooks Fenno, Jr. Miss Pauline Fenno of Rowley 
went to the Springs with Mrs, Boylston Beal and Miss 
Elizabeth S. Beal. 
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SOCIETY NOTES 
THE NORTH SHORE is beginning to show signs of 
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ife and renewed activity. People are moving about 
getting ready to remove shutters from the cottages and 
next week and the weeks of April following will see the 
vanguard of the summer colony well established. Rentals 
along the North Shore are way in advance of the usual 
run of things at this time of year, despite the bad winter. 
It will be a busy season on the North Shore—at the clubs, 
at the hotels and in all lines of activity. Some of the 
rentals made for the season through the Boardman office 
of Boston and Manchester are given below. 
° ° 
Included among the new-comers to the Pride’s Cross- 
ing section of the North Shore this season will be the 
Clement Newbolds of Philadelphia. They were at the 
Evans cottage, Peach’s Point, Marblehead, last summer. 
They have leased for this season the Proctor house at 
Pride’s Crossing. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jordan of Boston are to spend 
the summer at Beverly Farms, having leased the Larcom 
cottage, near Lee’s crossing and West Beach. 
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Miss Katharine Horsford of Cambridge will be at 
Manchester again this summer, having leased the Coolidge 
house in the Lobster Cove section of Smith’s Point. Last 
year Miss Horsford had “Meadow Ledge,” the James 
Means house at Manchester. 
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The John S. Newbolds of Philadelphia will also re- 
turn to Manchester this season, having re-leased the 
Strong cottage, corner Beach ‘and Masconomo streets. 
The Newbolds have a country home “Vernon Orchard,” 
at Jenkinstown, Pa., where they will spend the spring. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Bement are among the first of 
the season’s arrivals. They have just moved to South 
Hamilton, after a winter at the Copley-Plaza, Boston. 
They formerly made their year-round home in Beverly 
Farms. ‘The house which they have leased at Hamilton 
is near the Myopia Hunt club and has been remodeled the 
past winter. 
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Plans are out for a new house on Mingo Beach hill, 
Pride’s Crossing, on the site of the old Gardner cottage, 
removed last fall. The site is a most commanding one, 
overlooking the bay and Salem and Beverly harbors. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Philip P. Cie (Anna Wigglesworth) 
of Milton and Manchester, are at Lakewood,.N. J., for 
a few weeks. 
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The opening date of the Vincent club show ‘Hello! 
Frisco,” at Y° Wilbur: Theatre, Boston, is Monday, May 1. 
Rehearsals are in full swing in all the different branches 
and under different coaches. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Barklie Henry of Philadelphia and 
Beverly Farms have purchased a villa site on Sunset 
avenue, Palm Beach, where they have spent the winter. 
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Lathrop Brown and Mrs. Helen Ludlow Smith won 
the lucky numbers at the black and white costume leap 
year ball at the Ponce de Leon at St. Augustine, 
