34 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stockton are again at their Man- 
chester cottage after several weeks at Westport, N. Y. 
The annual meeting of the Essex County club was held 
Tuesday afternoon of this week, when the old board of 
officers and committees were re-elected. Lester Leland, 
Philip Stockton and George F. Willett, whose terms ex- 
pired this year as members of the executive committee, 
were re-elected; the other members of the committee 
being Gordon Dexter, Washington B. Thomas, Henry E. 
Russell, Walter D. Denegre and Amory Eliot. Mr. Eliot 
was chosen chairman of the committee again. Edward 
C. Fitz was re-elected secretary and treasurer. The mem- 
bers of the house committee are Mr. Eliot, Mr. Leland 
and Mr. Russell; grounds committee, Mr. Eliot, Har- 
rison K. Caner, Edward C. Fitz, and George F. Willett; 
golf committee, Mr. Willett, Mr. Caner and Samuel Carr; 
tennis committtee, Mr. Fitz, Nelson S. Bartley, jr., Miss 
Harriot Curtis and Miss Margaret Thomas; ladies’ en- 
tertainment committee, Mrs. Philip Dexter, Mrs. Gordon 
Abbott, Miss Mabel T. Boardman, Mrs. Lester Leland 
and Mrs. Washington B. Thomas. 
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Ipswich. 
Mrs. Bayard Tuckerman poured and the Misses Ruth 
and Alice Appleton served at the public view of the 
paintings in the Parish House, Ipswich, on one of the 
days of the exhibit last week in aid of the Hospital fund. 
Mrs. Joseph Lord of New York has rented her cottage 
on Argilla Road to a Mr. Binney and family. 
Arthur L. Sweetser, the Boston banker, and family 
have opened their beautiful stone villa ‘‘Greystone,’’ on 
Labor-In-Vain Road. 
Mrs. J. Francis Le Baron of Cleveland is at her beau- 
tiful family estate at Woodbury’s Beach. 
Rev. and Mrs. Roland Cotton Smith of Washington 
are abroad and their estate, ‘‘Cottonfield,’’ has been . 
rented to Miss Henderson of New Orleans. 
Rev. and Mrs. William G. Thayer of Southboro are 
absent this season, too, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sawyer 
of Brookline are tenants of ‘‘Holiday Hill,’’ the Thayer 
estate. 
Mr. and Mrs. Austin White of Cambridge have the 
South Main street house of Mrs. John Heard of Boston. 
The Historical Society of Ipswich has an anniversary 
eclebration under arrangement of much interest to the 
summer contingent. 
Ipswich anticipates quite a society wedding here in 
September, when Miss Madeline Appleton of Boston 
will wed Mr. Kidder of Chicago. 
Madame Clara VanDorn of Boston is summering at 
the Willeomb House. She is a noted linguist and is a 
graduate of Dantzig College, Germany. 
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At the Hotels. 
More and more Philadelphia families are represented 
each year in Magnolia. Recent arrivals from that city 
at the Oceanside are the Misses Roberts and maid. They 
occupy apartments in the Highlands, one of the cottages 
connected with the hotel. 
_ Another guest from the capital is Alexander Britton, 
who arrived from Washington in a motor ear after two 
days on the road with a chauffeur, and has joined Mrs. 
Britton and his daughters, the Misses Britton, at the 
Oceanside for the season. 
Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Blair and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer H. 
Adams were Chicago motor visitors to Magnolia having 
registered recently at the Oceanside. 
Marblehead 
Dean Alfred Burton of the Mass. Institute of Tech- 
nology, wife and younger children, have been spending 
a week in Marblehead at the cottage connected with the 
Polycraft Studio. Mrs. Burton’s mother, Mrs. Yates of 
England, is at the new Fountain Inn nearby. One of 
Dean Burton’s older sons is abroad. 
Jean N. Robertson of Cambridge gave a tea party 
Wednesday of this week for six friends at the tea room 
connected with the Polycraft. Mrs. Bennett of Boston, 
wife of Dr. Bennett, who has been so prominent in the 
pure milk agitation; Lawyer Perkins of Boston, and 
Miss Mary Aymar of New York, a prominent educator 
and lecturer on the work for the deaf, have also been 
guests at the Polycraft cottages. 
Mrs. George Coit Butts of Norwich, Conn., is among 
the people spending the summer in Marblehead and 
Adentified with its artistic interests. 
Marshall S. P. Pollard of Boston has acquired the 
‘““Driftwood’’ estate on Ocean avenue, Marblehead 
Neck, from Walter L. Van Kleeck of Millis. Mr. Pol- 
lard’s son, A. Wilder Pollard, has the Russell estate at 
Eastern Point, East Gloucester, this season. 
The summer colonists are much interested in the 
opening of the Lee mansion to visitors this season and 
during the week of August 8, the historical society will 
hold a fair in behalf of the mansion. 
Arrivals at Snowerest Inn have included Miss Blake, 
Milwaukee; Mrs. H. M. Savoy, Quiney; Mrs. Louis 
Keyes, Woburn; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Spratt, Bangor, Me., 
Mrs. Loring, Brookline. 
The children of the Harbor View cottage colony, Deve- 
reaux, will hold a sale of faney work, toys, cake and 
candy, orangeade, flowers, etc., at cottage No. 5 tomor- 
row in aid of the Floating hospital. 
jorie Hixon, Sarah Sherburne, Louise Hill, all of Boston, 
and Annie and Nellie Hourhan of Marblehead, aids, have 
the sale in charge. Early in the week 150 tickets had 
been sold. 
The Rockmere has been offering its many guests much 
diversion through the regular Saturday evening hops, 
bridge bundle parties and various evening entertain- 
ments. Distinguished guests at the Rockmere have been 
U. S. Senator Chandler of Concord, N. H., accompanied 
by Andrew J. Glover and G. W. Glover, jr.,- of Lead, 
N. D., grandsons of Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, the famous 
founder of Christian Science and exponent of its teach- 
ings. S. Higgins, prominent member of the directorate 
of the N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R., Mr. and Mrs. John -R. 
Fell, social leaders in Philadelphia, have also been at 
the Rockmere. 
yacht. Auto parties at the Rockmere have included 
Clarence L. Hall, family party, Hartford; E. H. Hamb- 
lin, Springfield; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bovey, Mr. and 
Mrs. C. H. Cochran, Minneapolis; Mrs. Jerome Chapin, 
Battle Creek, Mich.; Mrs. Frank L. Allen, Chicago; 
Mrs. Walker Ellis, Houston, Tex.; Dr. Matilde Masse 
of Boston. 
The Clifton Improvement association has elected the 
following officers: President, Samuel Shuman; vice- 
president, R. M. Boutwell; secretary, William L. Ter- 
hune; treasurer, George A. Dill; directors, J. Newton 
Cole, Summerfield Hagerty, H. D. Foss, Charles H. Hood. 
The recent arrivals at the New Fountain Inn include 
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Thurston, Washington; J. H. 
Warder and wife, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hop- 
kins, Albany; Mrs. Livingston and maid, N. Y.; Mr. and 
Mrs. W. W. McLennan, Detroit; W. L. Phillips and. 
wife, Pittsburg. 
Betty Boyd, Mar-. 
a eS Oe eee ae oS ee a ee ee 
The Fells came to Marblehead in their 
