a 
cottage which he 
Vol. XII 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, March 6, 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson S. Bartlett, 
Jr., who were married last summer 
at Wellesley, are to join the colony 
at Beverly Farms the coming sea- 
son. They will occupy the Arthur 
Barlow house, which is not far from 
where the Matthew Bartletts live 
at Beverly Farms the year round. 
Mrs. Bartlett was Miss Christine 
Hunnewell. 
o 8 
The Henry H. Hollisters of New 
York are to be on the North Shore 
again the coming season. They 
have a country place at Islip, N. Y., 
where they go for the spring and 
autumn. They will come to the 
Shore for the summer months. Last 
year they. had the Heaton ‘*Red 
Cottage,’’ but this year they will 
oceupy the former Boardman cot- 
tage now owned by Sydney E. 
Hutchinson, and located just across 
the street from the latter’s summer 
home at Beverly Farms. 
o8 9° 
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard C. Weld 
and family have again renewed 
their lease of the George Lee small 
cottage at Beverly Farms, through 
the Boardman agency. 
o 8B O 
Alfred §. Dabney has leased the 
Larecom cottage at Beverly Farms 
for the coming season,—the same 
had last year. 
390 | 
Francis A. Goodhue of Boston 
and Andover has leased the Samp- 
gon cottage at Nahant for another 
season, through the Boardman 
agency of Boston and Manchester. 
o 8° 
The wedding of Miss Gladys Me- 
Millan, granddaughter of Mrs. 
James McMillan of the Manchester 
summer colony, to Count Paul de 
Ruart in Paris, recently, was at- 
tended by many of the American 
eolony now in Paris. Of the num- 
ber we note the name of Miss Jane 
Fairfield, who is in Paris this win- 
ter. Lady Harrington and her hus- 
band—the former an aunt of the 
hride—went over from London for 
Mr, and ee Seeratd Bement, who 
have been at Palm Beach, Fla, the 
past six weeks, are expected back 
to Beverly Farms Tuesday of next 
week. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. Haratio N. Slater and 
daughters, Misses Esther and Ray 
Slater, left Boston yesterday for a 
trip to Japan, to be away most of 
the coming summer. 
°o 3 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stow Brad- 
ley and Miss Rosamond Bradley are 
sailing on Tuesday, the 17th of the 
month, from New York on the Car- 
onia, their objective point to be 
southern Spain. They plan to re- 
turn to their estate at Pride’s Cross- 
ing in the early summer. 
o 3 
Mrs. Henry Hall of Salem is plan- 
ning to open her cottage at Magno- 
lia very early this year, about the 
twentieth of this month. Mrs. Hall 
was at Magnolia Saturday superin- 
tending the preliminary work on 
the estate. 
o8B°O 
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Barr, who 
returned to the Copley-Plaza, Bos- 
ton, from New York, last week, are 
now in New Ipswich, N, H., looking 
after improvements on their large 
country estate. They expect to 
spend May and June in New Hamp- 
shire before coming to Beverly 
Farms. They will go to Virginia 
shortly to visit Mrs. Barr’s trela- 
tives, Mr. and Mrs. Randolph. 
oB°O 
Dr..J. A. Brown has leased his 
two cottages at Old Neck, Manches- 
ter, for the coming season, one to 
the David A. Ellises of Boston, and 
the other to the H. Ittlesons of St. 
Louis. 
o 8 O 
From the Transcript we reprint 
the following despatch from Colo- 
rado Springs: ‘‘Allenson 8S. Hall, 
former American consul to the Ar- 
eentine Republic, who died a week 
ago, left his entire estate, estimated 
at $10,000,000 to his daughter, Mrs. 
Carolyn Hall Sturgis of the city. 
Mrs. Sturgis is the wife of Prof. 
Wm.’ C. Sturgis, dean of forestry 
at Colorado college. Mrs. Sturgis 
is named as executrix of the estate 
in the will filed for probate.’’ Mr. 
Sturgis is the son of the late 
Major Russell Sturgis of Boston 
and Smith’s Pt., Manchester, and 
with his family spent last summer 
in the East, at the Sturgis estate at 
Manchester. 
1914 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
No. 10 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The W. D. Denegres are leaving 
New Orleans on the 22d of this 
month after a very gay winter at 
their home city, the feature of 
vhich was the coming out of their 
daughter, Miss Eleanor Denegre. 
They will go to Washington for a 
stay of a few weeks before coming 
on to their estate at West Man- 
chester. 
3 
Harry Lee, the only son of Mr.’ 
and Mrs. George Lee of Brookline 
and Beverly Farms is up against it 
again. He was thrown the other 
day while riding at one of the coun- 
try elubs near Dublin and is now 
nursing a broken leg and many 
bruises. 
oO 3% 
Mr, and Mrs. Ruel Ross Apple- 
ton, of Brooklyn, N. Y., announces 
the engagement of their daughter, 
Helen Lincoln, a graduate of Smith 
College, to Charles A. Read, Jr., son 
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Read of 
Manchester. Mr. Read is a Harvard 
man, class of 1911, and is now in 
business in New York ecity. He is 
a brother of Norman H. Read, Yale 
1913, and of Mrs. Burnett,’ wife of 
Dr. Francis Lowell Burnett of Bea- 
con street, Boston, who before her 
marriage was Miss Helen Read. 
Miss Charlotte Read is another sis- 
ter 
o 39 
Miss Edith Fitz of Boston and 
Manchester will have charge of 
the publicity arrangements for ‘‘A 
Modern Pandora,’’ the Vincent 
Club play to be given in Jordan 
Hall, Boston, April 28, 29, 30, and 
May 1, instead of Miss Charlotte 
Baylies as was first given out. “‘A 
Modern Pandora’’ is a burlesque on 
the old Grecian story which relates 
how woman is the cause of all evils 
in the world, and it gives a humor- 
ous setting forth of the fictitious ills 
that are supposed to ensue when 
women are settlement workers, suf- 
fragettes, physicians, lawyers, and 
also votaries of the tango, maxixe 
and the other modern danees, But 
as in the old classical story, hope 
remains and colors the outlook with 
optimistic prophecies. Miss Doro- 
thy Jordan will dance. 
o 
vo 
The Breezc %2.00 a year postpaid. 
