NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Vol. XI 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Hon, and Mrs. Franklin McVeagh concluded a short 
visit on the North Shore last Saturday with the James 
B. Wallers at Coolidge’s Point, Manchester. They have 
gone to Lancaster for a brief stay before returning to 
their country estate at Peteboro, N. H. Thursday night 
of last week Mr. and Mrs. Waller gave a dinner of 
twenty covers in honor of their distinguished guests. The 
Wallers plan to leave the Shore either the last of this 
week or the first of next for their winter home in Chi- 
cago. They will stop Se ey York for a short stay. 
The meeting of the Beverly Farms branch of the 
Beverly Improvement society, announced to be held on 
the 7th of this month at Mrs. R. S. Bradley’s, Pride’s 
Crossing, will be held on ms 14th instead. 
% Oo 
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Saltonstall of the Beverly 
Cove colony are receiving congratulations on the birth of 
a daughter, 
o 8 
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Mactaggart of Boston and 
Ardmore, Pa., who summer in Manchester, were of those 
_ sailing Tuesday on the Franconia. They have taken their 
car over with them and will do considerable motoring in 
England and the South of France, 
ono 
A recent announcement of interest to many North 
Shore people is that of Miss Eleanor Roelker of Provi- 
dence and Harrison Tweed of New York and Beverly 
Farms. 
oR SO 
Henry S. Grew, 2d, and family have just closed their 
cottage at West Manchester and returned to Boston for 
the winter. 
> 8 
The Leonard C. Hannas of Cleveland are among the 
week’s departures from Manchester Cove, 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, October 3, 1913 
No. 40 
SOCIETY NOTES 
There will be an Equal-Suffrage meeting in the Town 
hall, Manchester, on Wednesday evening, Oct, 8, at eight 
o’clock. Mrs. Maud Wood Park of Boston, will be the 
chief speaker. Mrs. Park has been for some time in 
charge of the Boston Suffrage association, and she has 
spoken all over this country and travelled around the 
world in the interest of the enfranchisement of women. 
Miss Louie R. Stanwood will also speak. She will an- 
swer some of the recent statements of the Anti-Suffra- 
gists and will give the latest suffrage news, national and 
inter-national. ‘There will be open discussion and all will 
be welcome. Admission free! 
o> % 
Col. and Mrs. Harry E. Russell closed their cottage 
at Manchester yesterday and returned to Boston, where 
they have apartments at The Gloucester, 8 Gloucester 
street, Back Bay. 
The H. McH. Landons of Indianapolis 
Rabardy cottage at Manchester Cove, Sept. 25. 
oe 
ve 
left the 
Mr. and: Mrs. James C. Barr who have been visiting 
in Virginia are in New York and will return to Beverly 
Farms this week. They will keep their cottage at Bever- 
ly Farms, also their New Ipswich, N. H., house open 
until after Christmas for week-ends. They will live at 
the Copley-Plaza when in Boston. They plan to spend 
January and February in New York and Washington. 
3 
The Rogers Manse, so-called, at Ipswich, together 
with more than four acres of land, is to be sold at auction 
on the premises on Tuesday, Oct. 14. at 3 o’clock. This 
is the estate lately occupied by John B. Bown. ‘There is 
a beautiful old colonial house on the estate, large, and 
with modern conveniences: it is in first-class repair. suit- 
able for summer and winter occupancy. Senator C. Au- 
eustus Norwood of Hamilton, whose Boston office is at 
70 State street. has charge of the sale. 
Henry Havelock Pierce 
Photographer 
MANCHESTER, MASS. : 
Junction Central and Bridge Streets 
Also BOSTON and NEW YORK 
The name Pierce on a_ photograph 
means the highest 
standard of artistic excellence even to the smallest detail. 
Pierce Photographs cost more because they are better. 
Why not have a portrait worth while? 
Pictures as low as $45 up to $200 
at Studio or home. 
sper, dozen. 
Portraits made 
TELEPHONE 298 MANCHESTER 
