- tagers at Manchester this summer. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1910. 
; SOCIETY NOTES 
Col. Henry May and family are among the new cot- 
They have taken the 
- large Kimball house at Smith’s Point and arrived last 
_ Friday. The house was occupied last year by the late 
7 
~ Ambassador Nabuco of Brazit. 
There are a number of 
_ young people in the family, including the Misses Isabelle 
_ May, who is connected with 
L. and Cecilia J. May, Geraid de C. and Henry Coleman 
the U. 8S. Embassy at St. 
- Petersburg. “The Mays were in Europe last summer. 
_ Miss Cecilia May is very fond of motoring. She has a 
Maxwell Sporitabout which she drives. 
—_xX— 
Mrs. Livingston Davis lett Pride’s Crossing Monday 
for a visit with relatives at Gardner, Me. 
—_—_x— 
_ Mrs. L. B. Harrison of Cincinnati, who has taken the 
Cobb cottage on Masconomy street, Manchester, for the 
- summer is expected between the first and the fifth of 
this month. 
—_x— 
a Daniel B. Wentz and family came on from Jenkins- 
town, Pa., which is a suburb of Philadelphia, to Pride’s 
" Crossing, “Tues sday. They have the Gardner cottage at 
Mingo Beach Hill this season. They brought on a spe- 
- cial ear load o* horses, seaees, ete. 
~ 
The George B. Posts of N Near York, who are to occupy 
_ the Dudley Pickman small cottage, will arrive at Bever- 
EY Cove within a few days. 
—_x-— 
Miss Dorashy Hancock of Texas and Hamilton pre- 
sented the eolers to the graduating class at Annapolis, at 
_ their recent commencement, and pictures of the func- 
_ tion show Miss Hancock cn the arm of Capt Bowyer, the 
_ Superintendent, and Mrs. Donald McLean presenting 
= 
ae 
_ Midshipman Benton with the D. A. R. cup for excellence 
iu International law. 
Mr. and Mrs. Larz Anderson, who take an active part 
- in North Shore society affairs, will be absent this sum- 
mer, as they have joined U. S. Secy. of War Dickinson 
“and wife on their trip to the Philippines. 
—_x— 
Justice Oliver Wendall Holmes and Mrs. Holmes ar- 
_ rived at their summer home in Beverly Farms last week 
to remain during the summer, This is the place where 
Justice Holmes’ father, the poet, summered for many 
years, and where he wrote many of his finest books. 
_ Only recently did Justice Holmes become the owner 
of the properiy. It was held by several heirs and he 
purchased their interests one by one until he became its 
_ possessor. 
He is one of the few summer colonists who 
_ exclusively prefer horses to automobiles and nearly 
every afternoon with Mrs. Holmes, he may be seen driv- 
‘ing over the delightful North Shore roads. 
which he occupies has much to interest Justice Holmes, 
‘as it was there that he was notified of his appointment 
~ 
The cottage 
_ to the State Supreme Court and later of his elevation 
to the highest judicial position in the United States, one 
that he has filled with honor, 
~ 
feller, 2nd, several seasons ago. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Kermit Roosevelt was on the North Shore over the 
week-end with the McKean boys at Pride’s Crossing. 
Henry P. und Q. A. Shaw McKean are at Harvard. 
They have bcen spending many of their week-ends at 
Pride’s Crossing during the winter. The McKean house 
has been opened and the family are expected on from 
Philadelphia this week for the season. 
The Dudley L. Pickmans, who have been spending the 
spring and early summer at their country estate in the 
Norfolk Hunt club district arrived at their Beverly Cove 
summer home this week. 
‘ —_—x-— 
George Dexter arrived this week from Europe and is 
with the other members of the family at Pride’s Cross- 
ig. 
—_—x— 
The Robert Fulton Cuttings of New York are coming 
to the North Shore the middle of next week. Last year 
the Cuttings had the W. J. Mitchell house at Manchester 
part of the summer. This year, they will have Pitch 
Pine Hall at Beverly Farms, one of the Otis Luke cot- 
tages. This was the cottage occupied by J. D. Rocke- 
The Cuttings have been 
spending the spring at Tuxedo Park, where they have 
a beautiful place. The young people of the family were 
quite active in social doings along the North Shore last 
season, 
—_x— 
Mrs. Franeis A. Lane of St. Louis, who-is now occu- 
pying her cottage at Manchester Cove, has been in Cam- 
bridge this week attending commencement at Harvard, 
where her grandson, Ralph M. Lane was graduated. 
She also attended the reanion of her son’s class of 1885. 
—_x-— 
Miss Helen Hooper has one of the finest private 
garages on the North Shore. The building formerly 
used asa power house for making the electricity for the 
estate has been transformed into a garage. It is finished 
in white enamel, has all the latest up-to-date appliances 
apd equipment. It is said to be the finest building that 
is strictly a garage, along the shore. 
—_—x— 
Mrs. DeWitt Talmage and her daughter, Miss Rebe- 
kah Talmage, annual guests at Magnolia, sailed for Ger- 
many, June 18, by the Lapland., 
—_x—- 
Miss Marian Greeley and her mother, Mrs. Rufus F. 
Greeley, of the Hotel Victoria, Boston, will be the only 
members of the family on the North Shore this summer. 
They are once more in the Brownland Cottage in Man- 
chester. Because of the many orders for portraits re- 
ecived by Russell Greeley during what he intended to 
be a Christmas holiday with -his mother and sister at 
the Victoria, he was unable to return to Paris until a few 
weeks ago. Mr. Greeley is kard at work in his studio in 
Paris, and is ‘* keeping house’’ there with a college chum. 
Tis brother, Norman Greeley, also has deserted this sec- 
tion for the present having rented his cottage at Bever- 
ly and gone with his family to Poland Springs, Me. 
