30 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
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° North Shore reese | 
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Published every Friday Afternoon. 
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VoLumeE 8. July 8, 1910 NUMBER 27 
July 9—July 15 
SUN FULL TIDE 
Rises Sets A. M. P.M. 
9 Sa. 4 16 TPZ 3. Shes. 1 00 
10 Su. 4 16 1222 1515 LSC 
11 M. 417 7 22 2 07 Za59 
12 Tu. 417 Teen: 2 58 3.29 
13 W. 4 18 ip vai 3 48 4-19 
14 Th. ~ 4 19 7-20 >) 4241 SEO 
oper. 4 20 Fp20 25-5035 5 58 
Manchester Playgrounds. 
The Brooks street playgrounds at 
Manchester, after months of work, 
is now in readiness for the boys and 
girls who care to use it. The base- 
ball diamond is in condition to use 
from now on. The school committee 
has awarded the contract for the 
playground apparatus to the A. G. 
Spalding Co. of Chicago, and a 
prompt delivery is expected. On one 
end of the long steel frame will be 
four swings. Next to this will be 
two parallel bars, a trapeze and two 
swinging rings. There will be teeter 
boards for the young people,—four 
in one set. There will also be a giant 
stride of six rings. All the apparatus 
will be made from Ford’s galvanized 
steel and is warranted and guaran- 
teed for five years by the Spalding 
Co. Under the trees are five sand 
pens for the little tots. The tennis 
courts are already in use. The com- 
mittee hoes eompleted* the work, for 
which $2000 was appropriated, with- 
in the appropriation. 
Manchester. 
The Daisy club are holding an- 
other of their invitation parties in 
the Town hall, Tuesday evening, 
July 12. 
Bathing suits for ladies and gents 
at E. A. Lethbridge’s. 
€EEEEEECEE sae titi tl ct 
: # Soriety Notes * § 
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Dy 2S SSSssPVSSACSCESSSESEEEEL 
East Gloucester 
Mrs. W. L. Van Buskirk of Seran- 
ton, Pa, and Miss L. C. Kimball, 
Brookline, are at the Harbor View. 
The Quaker City sends Misses L. P. 
and H. H. Baugh. An auto party 
included E. H. Reed and family, 
Worcester. From Montreal for a so- 
journ are Mrs. M. Stanton and Miss 
Stanton. 
At Merrill Hall is a most estimable 
and loyal summer resident of Hast 
Gloucester, Mrs. &. H. Abel and 
companion, Katherine K. Stickney 
of Brookline. For many years, Mrs. 
Abel, who is an aunt of Mrs. F. W. 
Crocker, summered at Hawthorne Inn, 
but her advancing years demanded 
a quieter place. Mr. and Mrs. Rich- 
ard M. Field, Boston; Mrs. R. J. 
Moses and Miss R. G. Moses are 
New Yorkers at the Hall, while an 
auto party included R. P. Chitten- 
den and family of Rowayton, Conn. 
A Wellesley college, commencement 
party included Miss Jessie Wolff, 
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. H. 
Wolff, Indianapolis; Mrs. J. W. F. 
Hughes and the Misses Hughes, To- 
peka, Kan. 
At the Fair View for the season 
are Mrs. R. M. Staigg, Boston, an 
annual guest of long standing; Mr. 
and Mrs. Joseph May, Philadelphia; 
Mrs. E. L. Beard, Miss Beard, Cam- 
bridge; Miss Eleanor M. Brooks, 
Baltimore. The hotel was filled for 
the holiday. 
At the Mailman House for the an- 
nual sojourn are Prof. and Mrs. G. 
S. Ravmer of the Harvard college 
faculty; also Mr. and Mrs. E. P. 
Faber and Miss Elizabeth Faber of 
Philadelphia, who were on _ the 
steamer Grecian of the Boston and 
Philadeiphia line, which caught fire 
just outside Philadelphia harbor 
and put back into port with a badly 
frightened passenger list. The fire 
was pus out and the steamer again 
proceeded to Boston. 
Annual guests from Mt. Airy, Md., 
at the Mailman House are J. H. 
Tingley and Miss EK. 8. Tingley. 
H. G. Bolton, Boston manager of 
the Brooklyn, N. Y., Gutta Percha 
and Rubber Co., and wife are at this 
hostelry for July. Other annual 
guests are Mrs. Edward W. Johnson 
and her mother, Mrs. Isabella G. 
Thomas, Norwich, Conn. Mrs. John- 
son’s son is abroad this season. H. 
R. Gibbs of Newtonville, who is ccn- 
nected with the publishing house of 
Houghton, Mifflin & Co., and Mrs. 
Gibbs have returned for the season. 
At the Beacheroft are Mrs. 
Charles Frick and three handsome 
young daughters, Susan, Dorothy 
and Mary Carroll Frick. They are 
prominent Baltimoreans connected 
with the famous Carroll family, w.10 
were widely known, both in Balti- 
more society and diplomatic circles 
of Washington. 
Other guests to return to the 
Beacheroft are John A. and Ellen A. 
Gilman of Newton; Dr. Gravg 
Dewey, Jacksonville, Il.; Mrs. 8. 0. 
Hartwell, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Mis:es 
Lucey G Owen, Laura H. Hatehin. 
son, Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. H. 
G. Mettingham, Haddonfield. N. J.; 
and Mrs. H. R. O’Hara, ~ Misses 
O’Hara, Mrs. J. W. Bailie, son and 
daughter from Toronto. 
The Episcopal services at the new 
Hawthorne Inn easino Sunday 
morning serve to bring the summer - 
colonisis together very generously. 
The presence of the U. 8. 8. Dol- 
phin and the U. S, S.. Mayflower 
gives n interesting naval touch to 
the outer harbor opposite theeEast- 
ern Pomt shore. 
The Rockaway, Rocky | Neck, 
proved popular for week-end and 
holiday auto parties. Among those 
registered were Mrs. R. R. Cleeland 
and son of Springfield, with their 
guest, W. R. Washburn, Newton 
Centre; W. H. Merriam, A. L. Smith, 
G. H. Bridges, A. H. Howard,. anl 
wives and Miss E. L. Howard from 
Worcester. Annual guests to regis- 
ter at the Rockaway from Worces- 
ter were Mr. and Mrs. John L. Brand 
and their-son, Charles L. Brand, U. 
S. N., late of Annapolis. In the 
Merriam party from Worcester were 
Ruth U Drew, Bertha E. Chamber- 
Jain and Helen R. Merriam. Arriy- 
ing for the season were Mrs. W. B. 
Noble and Earl B. Noble, Spring- 
field... There were special dining 
room dac¢orations on the holiday. 
The Misses Flagg of Boston, who 
are making the Curtis cottage, Hast. 
ern Point boulevard, their summer 
home, are seen driving a spirited 
span of chestnuts attached to a trig 
runabout. They are the daughters 
of the vice-president of the Ameri- 
can Express Co. 
Mrs. 
now quite a large property owner in 
East Gloucester, has arrived from 
Auburndale and opened her cottage 
studio for the season. She is also 
the owner of the Anchorage proper- 
ty and the two cottages on East 
Main street adjoining. 
Clara L. Harrington, who is — 
