NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1910. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
With the dinner-dance at the Essex County club Fri- 
day evening, the real festivities of the social season at 
Manchester-by-the-Sea will begin. These affairs are im- 
portant and each year are attended by leading members 
of society. Every table was engaged early and many 
who waited until the eleventh hour were disappointed 
so that another dance probably will be held in addition 
to the one already planned. Those who have tables in- 
elude Judge W. H. Moore of New York and Pride’s 
Crossing for a party of sixteen; Reginald Kennard of 
Boston, who will be host to a party from the Oceanside 
in Magnolia, to be chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Eugene 
Cuendet of St. Louis and made up of Miss Maude Scud- 
der of St. Louis, Katherine Britton of Washington; 
Kenneth Seggerman of New York, and Miss Katherine 
Moore of New York. Roger Hill of Saginaw, Mich., the 
former crack hurdler of the Yale track team, will be a 
guest of Dr. and Mrs. L. H. Lancashire of Alma, Mich. 
Others who have tables engaged are Mrs. John C. Kerr 
of Brooklyn, N. Y., Mrs. C. A. Munn of Washington, 
Mrs. Washington B. Thomas of New York and Boston; 
Mrs. J. Warren Merrill, Mrs. R. F. Greeley, George F. 
Willett, Mrs. E. C. Fitch, Mrs. S. E. Hutchinson, Mrs. 
Arthur Doane Cook, members of the German embassy, 
Samuel Carr, Mr. Kelsch of the Brazilian embassy, 
Captain Vassilieff of the Russian legation, Mrs. Wallace 
Goodrich, Mrs. W. 8S. Kennard of St. Louis, L. C. Hanna 
and Mrs. J. B. Bagnell of St. Louis, and the Italian 
embassy. 
—_—_x— 
_ Baroness Rosen, wife of the Russian ambassador, came 
over from the summer embassy in Manchester Monday 
to Magnolia where she was hostess to her friends and 
en tourage at tea at the North Shore Grill. 
fot 
"Miss Cecelia May returned to Manchester Wednesday 
from a very pleasant week’s visit with Miss Ethel 
Roosevelt at Oyster Bay. Miss Isabel May left 
Wednesday for a visit of a week or more with the 
Breeses at Southampton, L. I. 
. eae 
Mrs. Godfrey L. Cabot issued some one hundred and 
fifty invitations to a dancing party last Friday evening 
at ‘‘The Oaks,’’ Beverly Farms, in honor of the younger 
members of her household, Lewis Jackson Cabot, Eleanor 
Cabot and Thomas D. Cabot. The invitations were well 
distributed among the young people along the shore and 
the festivities of the evening were greatly enjoyed by 
the participants. 
—_x— 
Miss Margaret Kemp, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
George William Kemp of New York City and Southamp- 
ton, L. I., was a recent guest of Miss Helen Lancashire at 
Norton’s Point, Manchester. 
—_—_x— 
Max Norman has purchased of Harris and Moulton, 
35 acres of land at Middleton for stock farm purposes. 
The property is within one hundred feet of Fern-Croft 
n, 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Myopia Hunt club members and their friends have 
been following the polo matches very closely the last 
fortnight and many functions of greater or less import- 
ance have been occasioned by the games. The ‘‘pony 
drag’’ season is now on. The pony drag for the chil- 
dren of members will begin in August and will take 
place twice a week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. The 
hounds will meet for the older ones at 5:30 p. m. during 
August as follows: Tuesday, the 2d, Hamilton Four 
Corners; Friday, 5th, Wenham Neck Meeting House; 
Tuesday, 9th, Great Oak, Asbury Grove; Friday, 12th, 
Lord’s Hill, Wenham. Fixtures for the rest of the month 
will be announced later. The above dates are announced 
by George S. Mandell, master. 
Tennis will be the next big attraction at the Myopia 
elub. Beginning Monday, August, 8, two tournaments 
will be started,—mixed doubles, partners to be drawn 
by lot, and a ladies’ singles tournament. These events 
will be open to members and associate members of the 
Myopia Hunt, Essex County, Montserrat and Nahant 
clubs, and to such other persons as the committee may 
invite. The entries close Wednesday, August 3, with the 
lawn tennis committee. 
—_x-— 
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Wilkins of Washington have as 
their house guest at Beverly Farms Mrs. Edward C. 
Mayo of Richmond, Va., who is receiving a very agree- 
able introduction to the North Shore. 
W. S. Roelker, jr., of New York and Newport is on 
the North Shore for a visit with Fulton Cutting at 
Beverly Farms. 
—— 
Mrs. Herbert L. Satterlee has been on from High- 
land Falls, N. Y., for a visit with Mrs. Amory A. Law- 
rence at Beverly Cove. 
—Xx— 
Mrs. S. V. R. Crosby and children of the West Man- 
chester colony are to spend the month of August on Cape 
Cod, where they have taken a small cottage at Marion. 
—_x— 
EK. M. Wheelwright of the Beverly Farms colony, is 
at Jackson, N. H., for a short sojourn. 
— 
Miss Jeanette Dodge of Cleveland, O., is on the North 
Shore for a visit with Miss Marion McGinley, Smith’s 
Point, Manchester. Miss McGinley, by the way, is one 
of the many North Shore girls who have become quite 
adept as motorists. She may be seen driving her lmou- 
sine, with friends, nearly every day. 
eye 
Miss Boynton, who has been visiting Mrs. W. S. 
Spaulding at Pride’s Crossing, returned to her HOI in 
Kenilworth, Ill., Tuesday. 
a 
Mrs. Henry P. McKean gave an informal dinner at 
her Pride’s Crossing residence Wednesday evening. 
Next Friday evening, August 5th, she is to give a young 
people’s party, dancing to follow the dinner, 
