NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
VOL. IX 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1911. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. James Howe of Boston, has 
returned from Europe and is paying 
her annual visit to her sister, Mrs. 
George D. Howe, at ‘‘The Cliffs,’’ 
Smith’s Point, Manchester. 
oOo 9° 9 
Miss Helen Foss, daughter of 
Gov. Foss, won a red ribbon with 
Maurice Dimond’s King Forest at 
the horse show at the Wakefield fair 
last week. 
oOo °° 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Dana of 
Cambridge and Manchester, re- 
turned last Thursday from Europe. 
They were passengers on the Zee- 
land. 
oOo ¢0 9 : 
Mr. and Mrs. Chalmers Wood of 
New York, their daughter, Miss 
Mary Wood, and their youngest son, 
Francis Wood, were among the 
passengers arriving in New York 
last week on the St. Paul. Their 
summer home is ‘‘Briar Hill,’’ Ips- 
wich. Mrs. Wood is an aunt of 
Miss Harriette Woods of Chestnut 
street, Boston, and Cohasset, who is 
to marry Norman Sturgis, son of 
Dr. and Mrs. William Codman 
Sturgis of Colorado Springs, mem- 
bers of the Sturgis family of Boston, 
this autumn. 
oOo 9° 
Miss Josephine Rantoul of the 
Beverly Farms colony is enjoying a 
motor trip through the mountains 
this week. 
oOo O09 
C. Ki. Hodges and family of the 
West Manchester colony, removed 
to Brookline Monday. 
Rom 
Mrs. Charles 8. Tuckerman and 
her son, Leverett S. Tuckerman, 2d, 
of Boston and Ipswich, were passen- 
gers on the Zeeland, which arrived 
in Boston last Thursday. Most of 
their time was spent in London 
with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Chapin 
(nee Tuckerman) to whom a son 
was born last month. 
o°Oo° 4% 
Henry Clay Frick gave a lunch- 
eon for 12 at the Mystery Isles 
casino, Beverly Farms on Monday. 
It was in honor of Mr. and Mrs. 
Harding of New York. Mr. Frick 
has also chartered on different occa- 
sions the yacht Arion, owned by Mr. 
Rogers of the casino, and given 
yachting parties. The casino will 
not close until the last of November. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. 8. Parker Bremer and her 
daughters, who have been abroad 
since June, and Mr. Bremer, who 
went abroad last month to return 
with his family, are in London after 
a stay at the Crillon in Paris. They 
were booked to sail for Boston. from 
Liverpool on Tuesday of this week, 
on the Arabic. 
oOo 9° 90 
Judge and Mrs. Greenbaum of 
New York, who have been occupy- 
ing the Dr. J. A. Brown cottage at 
Manchester the past season, de- 
parted Monday for their winter 
home. 
oOo °O 090 
The Oceanside hotel at Magnolia, 
closed Monday morning after the 
most successful season in its history. 
We understand a number of im- 
provements will be made to the 
property before next season. 
oO 9° 
William Davis Sohier, Jr., of 
Beacon street, Boston, and Beverly, 
and his Harvard classmate, Hervey 
Wetzell of Detroit, were registered 
at Springfield last Friday. 
o0°o°09 
Miss Susan Thayer of Lancaster 
and Boston, who came to Beverly 
Farms for a week-end visit with 
Mrs. Bernard C. Weld, was taken 
suddenly ill. Her sister, Mrs. Fred- 
erick Winthrop, was summoned 
from Hamilton and Dr. Williams 
from Boston. A conference was 
held and it was deemed advisable 
to have Miss Thayer removed imme- 
diately to the Corey Hill hospital, 
Brookline, where she was operated 
upon for appendicitis last Sunday. 
oOo °O°O 
T. Dennie Boardman has returned 
to West Manchester from his yacht- 
ing trip to Labrador in the Intrepid, 
Lloyd Phoenix’s yacht hailing from 
New York. 
oO 9° 9 
The last days of September will 
be spent about the festive board. 
Several dinner parties will be given 
this evening. Among those enter- 
taining are Ellis Dresel of the Bev- 
erly colony and Mr. and Mrs. Perey 
Haughton and Mr. and Mrs. Walter 
J. Mitchell of the Manchester col- 
ony. Tomorrow evening Mr. and 
Mrs. Boylston A. Beal entertain a 
dinner company at their charming 
summer home, ‘‘ Clipston,’’ at 
Smith’s Point, Manchester. 
NOs 39 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Cotting 
are in West Manchester again after 
their trip to Rangeley Lakes, Me. 
o° °° 
Mrs. H. Mortimer Brooks left 
Bar Harbor Tuesday for her New 
York residence, 826 5th avenue. 
oOo 900 
Announcement was made Monday 
of the death of James L. Hever, a 
well known horseman, who, after a 
romantic courtship seven years ago, 
wedded a daughter of Mrs. Lucey 
Coleman Carnegie of Pittsburg, and 
the favorite niece of Andrew Carne- 
gie. He died at his home in Far 
Rockaway at four o’clock last Sun- 
day afternoon. Mrs. Hever was a 
former summer resident of Manches- 
ter. 
o°°0°0 
Mrs. Tom Pierce has coneluded 
her visit with relatives on Mystery 
Isles and returned to New York, 
where she will be a contestant in the 
coming horse-shows. 
oOo 9°09 
Mrs. F. H. Peabody will bring her 
season’s stay at her Beverly cottage 
to a close on Wednesday next. Her 
winter residence is at 247 Berkley 
street, Boston. 
o°Oo°9 9 
Mrs. Clement S. Houghton and 
family of the Manchester contin- 
gent, are settled at their winter 
home at Chestnut Hill, Boston. 
oOo ¢°O 9 
Miss Mabel T. Boardman was in 
Lowell Tuesday to give an address 
on the Red Cross society’s work. 
o°O° 9° 
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Barr 
spent the week-end at their Beverly 
Farms cottage. They were in Med- 
ford Wednesday, to attend the fu- 
neral of Mr. Barr’s unele, Gen. 
Samuel Lawrence. Mrs. Barr left 
Boston yesterday for Washington 
and will go on to, Virginia, where 
she will visit her estate. Her 
daughter, Miss Jane Fairfield, will 
attend school. Dick Fairfield left 
Beverly Farms Tuesday to spend 
two weeks at his home on Beacon 
street, Boston. He will attend the 
Noble and Greenough school... On 
Mrs. Barr’s return from Virginia, 
young Fairfield will join his parents 
at Beverly Farms for a short stay. 
oOo9 4 
The John Caswells removed from 
Mystery Isles yesterday. 
