or) 
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Our Motto: 
Fresh Laid Fancy Breakfast Egg 
Telephones: 1431 and 1432 Richmond 
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Frederick M. Burnham, whose wedding to Miss 
Rosamond Eliot takes place on the 20th of this month in 
Emmanuel Church, Manchester, has chosen for his best 
man, his brother, Wm. A. Burnham, Jr. The list of ushers 
includes the names of Samuel Eliot, brother of the bride- 
elect; together with Charles E. Cotting, Jr., Wm. Davies 
Sohier, Jr., William De Ford Beal and Roger Cutler of 
Boston, Chester G. Burden, John Kean and_ Richard 
Whitney of New York, John Shillito of Cincinnati, and 
Francis Gilbert of Utica, all classmates of Mr. Burnham, 
Harvard, 714. As has been stated Miss Eliot will have 
only one attendant, Mrs. Henry St. John Smith (Con- 
stance Wharton). Dr. Endicott Peabody will perform 
the ceremony and a wedding breakfast will follow at the 
Amory home, Old Neck, Manchester. 
Oo 8 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Carr of Boston are at White 
Sulphur PORES W. Va., for a week or two before open- 
ing their house at West Manchester for the summer. 
Oo 4 O° 
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Wood of 21 Fairfield st.; 
Boston, and Pride’s Crossing, gave a dance for about 200 
in the Empire ballroom of the Tuileries Friday night of 
last week to introduce to the younger social set the re- 
cent brides of their two sons, Mrs. William M. Wood, Jr., 
and Mrs. Cornelius A. Wood. The former was Miss 
Edith Goldsborough Robinson of Louisville, and the lat- 
ter was Miss Muriel Prindle of Duluth. The weddings 
took place in February and December. In the receiving 
line Friday night were Mr. and Mrs. William M. Wood, 
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Wood, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. 
Cornelius A. Wood. The ushers were James Tillinghast, 
Wallace Fleming, Joseph Walker, Richard Searle, Fran- 
cis Capper, George W. Cobb, Jr., and Clement Stodder, 
several of ‘whom were ushers at the weddings. 
SESE P LES 2 
Much of the praise for the unbounded success of the 
Vincent club show, “Hello, Frisco,” which was presented 
at the Wilbur Theatre, Boston, the first of this week, be- 
longs to Miss Louise McAllister, who wrote the play. 
Miss McAllister appeared as Juanita in the cast. She has 
a lovely voice and sang with a great deal of charm and 
manner, especially in “The Fox Trot Lullaby,” which she 
rendered with Miss Anne Means, who took the part of 
Capt. John Mead in the khaki costume of an American 
Sites Miss McAllister wore a lovely gown of pale 
blue silk in the first act, with a black velvet hat, and in 
the last act her costume of heavy silk in a true lover’s 
knot design in Dresden colors on a white ground was the 
most beautiful ball gown on the stage. Other North 
Shore girls besides these two took part in the show. 
fee Beh Sd 
E. C. Fitch and family will open their summer home 
on Norton’s Point, Manchester, next week. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
1837-1916 
BUTTER and EGGS 
gs, and Best Quality Butter for Table or Kitchen, Delivered as Wanted. 
PASTEURIZED BUTTER 
Oldest and only Butter and Egg House in Boston conducted by the same family for three generations. 
We take great pride in this record, and are now receiving the best butter handled in our long experience, 
the best butter coming to Boston, uniform as to flavor and salt. 
: ; ESTABLISHED 1837 
We make a specialty of delivering butter and eggs on ed a Shore, by our own trucks, or express charges 
prepaid. 
009000000000 00000000000 000000000000 00000; 
May 5, 1916. 
00000 
Always Best Quality 
87 and 89 Faneuil Hall Market 
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POOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOO OOOO OOO OOOO 
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel A. Sullivan and family of 
Brookline, always among the first to arive and the last 
to depart, are settled in their cottage, on Beach street, 
Manchester, for the summer. 
o #0 fe 
Mrs. James D. Safford, who has lived in Washington 
the past winter, is expected to arrive at her summer home 
on Norton’s Point, Manchester, oe week. 
o 
T. Dennie Boardman he Mr. and Mrs. Wallace 
Goodrich have arrived at West Manchester for the sum- 
mer. 
Louis Strauss and family of the Hotel Somerset, 
Boston, have leased “Ledge Leaf,” the pretty bungalow 
on the Harris property, Proctor st., Manchester, and wiil 
occupy the same at once. 
7133 4D , 
Dr. H. E. Warren of Beverly Farms, has purchased 
the estate of Dr. James Marsh Jackson, Hale street, 
severly Farms, it is said, and will live there this summer. 
> ° 
Mr. and Mrs. Rated Bartlett of Boston are set- 
tled at their Beverly pe cottage for the season. 
Dr. Marshal peeen ot 379 Commonwealth ave., 
Boston, has leased the Louis Agassiz Shaw cottage at 
Beverly Farms, for the summer. ‘The Shaws now own 
a splendid new country Pee at Peterboro, N. H. 
Ce 
Mr. and Mrs. Julius Hisegedn and family of Boston, 
are among the week’s arrivals at Beverly Farms. 
Oo 4 °O 
A car-load of Judge Wm. H. Moore’s prize show 
horses were shipped from Pride’s Crossing Wednesday 
for the show at Washington. 
o 8 
Arrivals among the Magnolia cottage colony this 
week include the George L. Hamiltons of Boston, whose 
cottage is on Norman’s Woe Road. Mr. and Mrs. John 
S. Ford of Highland Park, Chicago, are also spending 
May at Magnolia, at their cottage on Fuller st. 
OVS <O : 
The William A. Slater house at Beverly Cove has 
been rented for the summer to Martin Erdman and fam- 
ily of New York, who bag the place last year. 
H. A. Haskell, thon as been assistant manager at 
Tampa Bay Hotel, "Tampa, Florida, the past season, has 
leased the Hotel Aborn and Cottages at Magnolia for 
the season. Mr. Haskell is already at Magnolia, getting 
the hotel and its several connections in readiness for open- 
ing in June. 
Among the list of RE a NAS will take an active 
part in the steeplechasing at the hunt meetings this year 
will be F. H. Prince, of Boston, who until the outbreak 
of the war, spent considerable time in France. Mr. 
