NORTH SHORE BREEZE 11 
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, SOCIETY NOTES. 
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Raymond plan to spend most of 
_ the fall and winter at Manchester to keep in touch with 
- operations on their new summer estate, off Beach street, 
work on which was started a week or two ago. The 
house is to be completed and ready for use by another 
season. : 
The French Amabassador and Mme. Jusserand have 
returned to Washington from their summer’s sojourn 
in France. The chargé d’affairs, M. Portalis, and 
_ fumily are still in Manchester. 
_ Mrs. and Mrs. Phillip Dexter of Boston and Beverly 
Farms are expecting to occupy their new summer home 
noon Forest street, Manchester, for a few weeks this 
_ autumn and are making arrangements to do so before 
_ leaving the North Shore for Boston. 
_ Mr. and Mrs. Paul Moore (nee Hanna), a bride of 
_ last autmun, are concluding their stay at the Farms 
- about Oct. 1 and will go to New York, their future 
~ home. 
: Mr. and Mrs. Newell Bent, who have been at Brown- 
_ land cottages in Manchester since concluding their stay 
at the Oceanside, Magnolia, planned to leave the Shore 
bg 
_ Mr. Bent was in personal charge of the W. C. Langley 
_ & Co. summer brokerage office at Magnolia this sum- 
mer. 
% Tuesday Miss Helen Taft made one of Mrs. Levi Z. 
_ Leiter’s party who motored to the aviation meet. The 
_ other guests were Miss Marjorie Colton of Washington, 
Lieut. Roweliffe of the U.S. S. Mayflower and Dr. Cary 
T. Grayson. Charlie Taft has been a.constant atten- 
dant at the meet and Tuesday was with J. E. Harlow, 
_ who is legal advisor of Larz Anderson. 
Major and Mrs. Henry L. Higginson’s autumn loca- 
tion since leaving West Manchester is Vergennes, Vt., 
where t! cy have a beautiful estate on Lake Champlain. 
Preston Gibson returned from a business trip to 
New York Tuesday evening of this week. Mrs. Gibson 
gave a luncheon of twelve covers at her Beverly Farms 
cottage Tuesday afternoon. Their guests, Mr. and Mrs. 
Breese, have returned to New York. 
Antiques 
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We have a choice assortment of old- 
fashioned pieces on hand for this season 
George N. Towle is removing his family tomorrow 
from théir Mystery Island cottage to their town house 
in Newton Centre. 
The G. S. Curtis, jr.’s, are occupying the H. L. Hig- 
ginson small cottage at West Manchester for the 
autumn. This is the cottage occupied by Dr. Franklin 
Baleh and family the last summer. The Balchs left this 
week. 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Fabyan of Boston and West 
Manchester have returned to West Manchester from 
Buzzards Bay, where they have spent much of the 
summer. 
Robert Blake has been making an extended stay with 
his mother, Mrs. 8. Parkman Blake of Boston and West 
Manchester. The Blakes will remain on the Shore until 
Oct. 15. 
Miss Amie Clark has been entertaining her fiance 
from Philadelphia at the West Manchester summer 
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Howard Clark, jr., 
of Philadelphia, who are leaving for their country es- 
tate at St. Davids, Penn., the last of the month: Miss 
Clark’s wedding will be a society event of the coming 
season in Philadelphia. The Clarks have the refusal of 
the Boardman cottage for next season again. 
Robert Taft concluded his visit with college friends 
in Chicago Thursday of this week. Messrs. Ewen and 
August Knight have been his hosts and as Yale chums 
they did much for his entertainment. 
Mrs. Gordon Prince is entertaining her aunt, Mrs. 
Chickering, who is with her for an autumn visit, after a 
season in Bar Harbor. Gordon Prince, jr., had as guest 
over the last week-end, Mr. Cobb of Milton. 
Mr. and Mrs. Eben D. Jordan are not due from Europe 
until the middle of October, so that their West Man- 
chester estate is closed for the season. Miss Dorothy 
Jordan, since her return from abroad, has been at her 
farm at Wenham Neck, where she has a most complete 
establishment and where her brother, Robert Jordan, 
has spent much of the summer. 
George E. Noyes of Boston and West Manchester en- 
tertained a number of Boston friends recently by a mo- 
tor boat trip to Newburyport. The start was made from 
the Manchester Yacht club. 
Antiques 
Early Comers will find some Rare Things 
214 Cabot St., 
Corner of 
Bow St. 
Beverly, Mass. 
'|H. J. GAY ELEGTRIG GO. Everything Electrica 
Successor to Clark and Mills Electric Co. 
G.E. Tungstens and Edison Lamps 
HEADQUARTERS FOR 
ALL STYLES OF 
| Postoffice Block : : . 
Manchester, Mass. 
; Telephones: Store, 146-5; Residence, »24-5 
—s: * 
