ander Rodgers, Jr. 
Vol. XII 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
Among the newcomers to the North Shore this sum- 
mer will be Mr. and Mrs. Frederic R. Galacar of Bos- 
ton, who have just leased through the Boardman agency 
the so-called Valleyside Cottage at Beverly Farms, for- 
merly owned by Otis H. Luke. Mrs. Galacar was Miss 
Rosamond Lang. Last Spee 9, were in Europe. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Russell and family will 
have the Mandell cottage at Beverly Cove this season. 
Last year they had the NOES at Pride’s. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Searle and family, who 
have been absent from Boston all winter spending most 
of their time in the South, are at Atlantic City for the 
Faster season and from there they will come directly 
to their country place, Inglisby, in Ipswich. Miss 
Corinna Searle is visiting Mrs. Moncure Biddle (Brenda 
Fenollosa), in Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Biddle were 
married last June at Inglisby. 
Mr. and Mrs. Perey Chase, of the Topsfield colony, 
who left in the early autumn for an extended absence 
abroad, came into New York on the last trip of the Ad- 
riatic from the Mediterranean ports. The Chases have 
been en tour in Southern Europe since concluding their 
journey in Egypt, and pce prcent of the Nile. 
Mr. and Mrs. Eben D., Jordan and party expect 
to return from their California trip by the first of May. 
Shortly afterwards Mr. and Mrs. Jordan will sail 
for the opera season in Paris. They will stop at Yel- 
lowstone Park on the Ste aha from California. 
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Saltonstall left Beverly Cove 
Tuesday for a trip to California. They plan to be 
away some weeks and will go north from California 
as far as Seattle. a 
Mrs. Charles A. Munn and family, who are now in 
Washington plan to arrive in Manchester for the season 
the latter part of this month. 
Alicia Meyer, grandchild of Mr. and Mrs. George 
von L. Meyer, of Hamilton, was christened in Washing- 
ton, on Sunday, by Rev. Roland Cotton Smith, D. D., 
rector of St. John’s church. The child is the daughter 
of Lieutenant C. Raymond P. Rodgers, U. S. N., and 
Mrs. Rodgers (Alys Meyer), who were married by Dr. 
Smith last spring. The child’s godparents are Mrs. 
Meyer and Mrs. Alexander Rodgers, its grandmothers, 
and Miss Julia Meyer, an aunt. The godfather is Alex- 
Property owned by the heirs of Stephen J. Ward- 
well at Lincoln House Point, Swampscott, including 150,- 
400 feet of shore property, the Lincoln House and three 
cottages, has been purchased by Charles H. Bergengren 
and Roy F. Bergengren of Lynn. ‘The hotel will be re- 
modeled and will be operated under the management of 
Allen Ainslie. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, April 10, 1914 
No. 15 
SOCIETY, NOTES. 
Baron Eric Zwiedinek, councellor of the Royal Im- 
perial Austro-Hungarian ‘embassy, will come to the 
North Shore this summer and will occupy the large 
house on School street, Manchester, owned by Maynard 
B. Gilman of Brownland Cottages. ‘This is not far from 
the Essex County club and is the house occupied a few 
seasons ago by members of the French embassy. 
Oo & 
Miss A. Isabel Winslow of Boston was at Magnolia 
the first of the week superintending improvements at 
her attractive cottage on Hesperus avenue. 
3 
Mrs. John R. McGinley and her daughters, Misses 
Marion and Lois, arrived from their European trip 
on the last trip of the Kaiserin Auguste Victoria, to 
New York. They were in Switzerland for the winter 
sports and have since been enjoying life on the Riviera 
and Paris. It is said they will not take a cottage on 
the North Shore this season. 
Oo & 
The Norton Wigglesworths have leased the Pick- 
ering cottage at Old Neck, Manchester, for the coming 
season. They had the same place last year; it is quite 
near the Wigglesworth estate. Headmaster and Mrs. 
Lane of Milton academy have been spending part of 
the Haster holidays at the small cottage on the Wig- 
elesworth estate. 
o & 
One of the delightful functions for young people 
planned for Easter week is the annual dance arranged 
bv the young men who are students at the Noble 
school, Boston, preparing for college. The dance 
will be given on:Kaster Monday night,—the 13th. 
33 
Charles Willis Jones of Boston was at “High Fields 
Cottage,” the summer home of the family at Magnolia, 
Sunday, preparatory to opening the house for the season. 
33 
The following rentals of summer cottages at Mag- 
nolia have been made by Jonathan May, who has charge 
of most of the summer property in that section: The 
H. H. Newton cottage to Arthur W. Jones of Boston; 
the William Newton cottage to Edward H. Graham; 
Butler cottage to Henry H. Schmidt of Washington; W. 
B. Wilkins cottage to Solomon Stratton of Boston; the 
Rehn cottage (Shore View) to Mrs. William Atherton 
of Boston; the lower MacDonald cottage to E. Prescott 
Rowe and the Sundial cottage to Henry W. Farnum of 
Chicago. All of the above are renewals, except in the 
case of E. Prescott Rowe, who had the so-called upper 
MacDonald cottage last season. 
33 
Judge William H. Moore of Pride’s Crossing has sent 
50 thoroughbred horses in private cars to Brooklyn to 
enter in the Brooklyn horse show shortly to be held. 
After the show and after returning to Pride’s Crossing, 
they will sail in May for the London International horse 
show. Judge Moore charters a boat especially to take 
his men and horses across. 
