NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1910. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mid-season next week will find North Shore society 
with plenty of attraction in the sporting line to which to 
turn their attention. With the first polo tournament 
of the season at the Myopia Hunt club, the tennis tour- 
nament at the Essex County Golf club and the open golf 
tournament at the Essex County club, besides a variety 
of other diversions, no one can complain for lack of 
sport. The tennis tournament at the Montserrat club 
starts Monday. There will be ladies’ singles and 
doubles and mixed doubles. There are a large number 
of entries, including all the best known young people of 
the North Shore. The polo tournament at Myopia will 
start Monday, July 18, and will continue to Tuesday, 
July 26. On Wednesday, the 20th, the play will be for 
the Myopia Cups, Cooperstown vs. Mr. Amory’s team. 
The special invitation golf tournament will be played 
at the Essex County club on Thursday, Friday and 
Saturday, July 21, 22 and 23. 
—_—xX—— 
The early demand for tables for the dinner dance at 
the Essex County club on Friday evening, July 29, 
would indicate that the event will be one of the most 
important social functions of the summer. 
—_xX— 
Mr. and Mrs. John Hays Hammond of New York and 
Washington, are in Chicago to attend the wedding, 
Monday, of Miss Mary Ryerson at her home in Lake 
Forest, Ill., to Mr. Frost, a Southerner. The Ryersons 
are close friends of the Hammonds. 
Mrs. Grover Cleveland and her two daughters are to 
pay a visit to the Hammonds at their beautiful estate 
at Fresh Water Cove, later in the summer. Miss Marion 
Wise, a niece of F. G. Newlands, U. S. Senator, of 
Reno. Ney., is a guest of Miss Hammond at the present 
time. 
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Mrs. John L. Bremer, who has been spending the late 
spring and early summer at her summer estate in Man- 
chester, has gone to Walpole, N. H., for a few weeks’ 
stay. She is stopping at the Walpole Inn. Her daugh- 
ter, Miss Sarah Bremer is at Cohasset for a short visit 
with her brother, Dr. Clifton Long Bremer and family. 
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Mrs. James T. Fields has with her for a visit at 
“Thunderbolt Hill,’’ her Manchester summer home, 
Miss Jessie Cochrane of Rome, Italy, who is in America 
making a round of visits with friends. She plans to 
_ visit her old home in Kentucky before returning to Italy 
in the autumn. 
—-X-— 
Mrs. Thomas M. McKee is giving an informal dinner 
at her Beverly Farms home tonight. Covers will be 
laid for ten. 
: Get 
Frederick Foster Carey and family have come on from 
Tuxedo Park and are occupying ‘‘Lodgehurst,’’ one of 
the J. Warren Merrill cottages on Smith’s Point. Mr. 
Carey has brought on his schooner yacht, the ‘‘Signet,’’ 
aboard which he will do more or less entertaining dur- 
Ing his stay on the shore. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. W. B. Thomas will open her residence at Pride’s 
this afternoon for the first of the musicales ar- 
ranged by Mrs. Hall McAllister. There are to be two 
others, July 29, at the residence of Mrs. T. Jefferson 
Coolidge, jr., and on August 12 at the villa of Mrs. 
Oliver Ames at Pride’s Crossing. All are at 4 o’clock 
and the artists have been carefully selected. Francis 
Rogers for one, and he has a notably fashionable follow- 
ing here as well as in Washington, where he frequently 
sings at the White House. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Denegre entertained .Presi- 
dent Taft and family at lunch last Saturday, at their 
beautiful summer estate, Villa Crest, West Manchester. 
Mr. and Mrs. Denegre have been entertaining Attorney 
General and Mrs. Wickersham a few days this week, 
during their visit to the North Shore. The Attorney 
General came here to see President Taft. 
—_x— 
Count Wedel, chargé d’affaires of Germany. is to be 
joined at Manchester within a few week by Countess 
Wedel, who remained in Germany for a few weeks after 
her husband’s return to America. 
—_—x— 
The H. T. Bradleys of Nyack, N. Y., are newcomers to 
the Manchester shore this season They have just taken 
the Perkins cottage on Sea street for July and August. 
—x— 
One of the finest auxiliary yachts in North Shore 
waters this season is that of W. Harry Brown of Pitts- 
burg which dropped anchor off Burgess Point recently, 
after a cruise up the coast from New York. She has 
three masts and is square rigged. A few days ago Mr. 
Brown, with a party of friends, left these waters for a 
two or three weeks’ trip to Labrador. The Browns are 
occupying the Sohier cottage, formerly occupied by the 
Thos. Beals family, and which is near President Taft’s. 
They are newcomers to the Beverly shore and are enjoy- 
ing it to the fullest extent. 
—_—x— 
Mrs. George D. Howe has with her for the month of 
July, at her Smith’s Point summer home, Mrs. Henry P. 
Coffin and daughter, Miss Margaret G. Coffin, of Boston, 
who are cousins of Mrs. Howe. 
—Veoe 
Dr. Franklin Balch and family have returned to Man- 
chester for another season. They are occupying the 
small cottage on the Henry L. Higginson estate, West 
Manchester. The house has been greatly improved since 
last year when it was occupied by Mrs.. Hall Mc Ailister. 
It has been moved back from the highway about 100 feet 
and a large addition has been built including a veranda 
porch, 
— 
Mrs. W. Scott Fitz has consented to open her resi- 
dence on Smith’s Point on Thursdays, July 28 and 
August 4, at 11 o’clock, for two explanatory talks on 
Chantecler (in French) by Charles Le Deuce, who has a 
degree of Docteur es Sciences Politiques of the ‘‘Jour- 
nal’’ of Paris, 
