NORTH SHORE BREEZE II 
W. C. LANGLEY & COMPANY 
BANKERS AND BROKERS 
19 Kilby Street, Boston 
Members of New York and Boston Exchanges 
10 Wall Street, New York 
SUMMER BRANCH OFFICE 
OCEANSIDE HOTEL, MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
Our office is equipped with the direct wire to Boston and New York and we offer every facility for the 
execution of orders in all markets. 
We cordially invite you to use this office in the transaction of any business that you may have during 
the summer months. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The international horse show at London closed 
last Saturday. From a spectacular and practical stand- 
point it surpassed its predecessors. More than 260,000 
people attended in all, 13,000 on the afternoon of the 
visit by the King and Queen. The value of horses and 
paraphernalia exhibited amounted to about $5,000,000. 
Ot the American exhibitors, Judge William H. Moore, of 
Pride’s Crossing, with his driving horses, from fours to 
singles captured everything—six championships, eight- 
een firsts, four seconds, two thirds, seven fourths, six 
fifths and one sixth. 
o°Oo°0 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Lathrop Brown of New York (nee 
Miss Helen Hooper) were registered at the Touraine, 
Boston, over the Country Club races. Their visit was 
creatly saddened however, by the tragic death at the 
races of their friend, Mr. Fuller, of New York, who 
was clo ely allied with them in the conduct of their 
racing stables. 
oO090° 
Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Weyerhaeuser of St. Paul, were 
guests of the Lancashires at Manchester this week. 
Mr. and Mrs. Weyerhaeuser motored up from New 
Haven, where Mr. Weyerhaeuser had been in attendance 
upon the class reunion of 1895. They left on Wednes- 
day in their motor for Detroit. This was their first 
visit to the North Shore and they were extremely 
pleased with the surroundings. 
oOo 9° 9 
Master John Caswell has concluded his studies at 
St. Mark’s school and joined his parents at Mystery 
Island for the summer. 
o°O°90 9 
Judge and Mrs. W. H. Moore of New York, are due 
at Pride’s July 7. They have been prominently identi- 
fled with the Coronation festivities and were guests at 
several of Mr. and Mrs. John Hays Hammond’s social 
functions. 
oOo 9°09 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Bradley and the Misses 
Leslie and Frances Bradley of Boston and Pride’s, were 
registered at Claridge’s Hotel, London, during Corona- 
tion week. They had previously been in Germany and 
France. 
o°Oo°O 4 
Mr. and Mrs. Eben D. Jordan of Boston and West 
Manchester, were very active during the New England 
Conservatory’s Commencement at Boston, showing 
much social attention to the graduates. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Included among recent arrivals in London is Hugo 
R. Johnstone, whose sojourn in the English capital was 
not a lengthy one. Mr. and Mrs. Johnstone are prom- 
inent in the Hamilton colony, where they have occupied 
the Garland Cottage for several years, and taken an 
active part in the LUE the Myopia Hunt Club. 
° 
Among the Brookline people who went to New 
London to see the boat races between the Harvard and 
Yale crews were Mr. and Mrs. Larz Anderson. The 
Andersons traveled in their new touring ear. They re- 
mained at New London until after the races, returning 
to Brookline for a few days and then left for New 
Hampshire, where they have a beautiful estate. 
oOo 9°94 
Miss Eleanora Sears was a member of the little 
group of women racers, who donned brilliant hued 
jockey costumes and rode ponies astride, at the fash- 
ionable Country club races at Brookline. 
o°o°O 9 
Among those who dined at Dorchester house, the 
residence of Whitelaw Reid, the American ambassador, 
in honor of the coronation, were John Hays Hammond, 
tle special envoy representing President Taft at the 
coronation, Mrs. Hammond and Miss Hammond. In 
honor of the visit of Mr. Hammond to Dorchester house, 
the decorations, which were one of the greatest attrac- 
tions of the past week, were again illuminated. Mr. 
aod Mrs. Hammond gave a lunch at Stratton house, the 
guests including the hereditary princess of Saxe-Mein- 
bigen, sister of the German Emperor, Baron Roden of 
the staff of the princess, Ambassador and Mrs. Reid, Mr. 
and Mrs. Charles P. Taft, and the members of the special 
and regular embassies. Later Ambassador and Mrs. 
Hammond went to Windsor in a royal motor with other 
coronation visitors and looked over the palace. They 
repaired from there to Baron Leopold Rotchchild’s, 
nearby, to attend a garden party. This was one of two 
important functions of the kind, the other being given 
by John Norton Griffiths, M. P., to the colonial visitors. 
Both, however, were spoiled by continuous rain. ° 
o°O° °° 
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Barr entertained at luncheon 
on Tuesday at their home ‘‘Barr Harbor,’’ Beverly 
Farms, several members of The Fly Club of Harvard. 
Tux the afternoon the party which included Mrs. and 
Miss LeBreton of Manchester, Miss Wilkinson of Bos- 
ton, and others went to the Essex County Club for 
tennis and tea. 
