June 16, 1916. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 21 
We have a Complete Stock of Drug Store Goods 
Prescriptions our specialty 
Cc. H. KNOWLES CO. 
THE REXALL STORE 
Railroad Avenue, So. 
Hamilton, Mass. 
PSWICH will have valued additions to its social life in 
the coming of Dr. and Mrs. James Marsh Jackson 
(Leonora Lewis) of Boston and formerly of the Beveriy 
Farms colony. Their young daughter, Miss Eleanor 
Jackson, is exceedingly popular in all the sports of the 
younger set along the Shore. The family is already set- 
tled in the Ayer cottage, on Argilla road, occupied last 
summer by the Joseph P. Warners of Boston. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Crane, Jr., of Chicago ar- 
rived at their Castle Hill estate in Ipswich early last week. 
Mr. Crane plans to entertain the school children with a 
picnic on his fine beach as usual at the close of school. 
Y° Rogers Manse in Ipswich is supplying a long-felt 
want in this delightfully quiet and exclusive little resort. 
Mr. and Mrs. Steven S. Townsend of 6 Newbury st., 
Boston, came early in June for the entire summer. Mr. 
Townsend is the noted musician, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 
_F. Wood of Boston arrive today for their second summer 
at the Manse. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. L. De Blois have spent 
ten days at the Manse while waiting for their home on the 
Topsfield road to be ready for occupancy. Mr. and Mrs. 
Frank H. Richardson of “Meadow View,” Ipswich, who 
have let their home to the Richard Sears’ of Boston are 
also at the Manse with their son Jerome. Their daughter, 
Miss Eleonora Richardson, who was presented last sea- 
son at a charming garden party at her home, will join 
the family as soon as the term closes at a Prividence, R. I., 
school which she has been attending this winter. The 
family will stay at the Manse until July 6, when they 
will go to N. Sutton, N. H., for the summer. The 
Nathaniel S. Simpkins of Acorn st., Boston, have taken 
the top floor of the Manse for seven weeks, going frora 
here to their home in Beverly Farms. 
: Several changes have been made in the Manse for 
this season. The dining room has been cnlarged, nine 
additional rooms have been made ready for the many 
tourists who have been seeking the place all spring. A 
new porch is in construction for afternoon tea parties. 
Tea is also'served on the large and finely shaded lawn. 
Mrs. James Howe Proctor of Ipswich was a guest 
at the Munchinger King at Newport over last week-end. 
Ogden Codman, the noted architect from New York, 
will again occupy “Floriana,” the Peabody estate on the 
County road, Ipswich. This is one of the finest and 
most attractively planned places on the County road. Mr. 
Codman spent his first season there last summer. He 
has an extensive estate in France, but is not occupying 
it on account of the war. 
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P, Warner, the parents of 
~Roger S. Warner, will occupy a remodeled house on the 
Wendell place, recently purchased by R. S. Warner for 
his new summer home in Ipswich. 
Hon. C. Augustus Norwood will not occupy his 
home on the Mill road this season. It and the other 
Norwood houses which are to rent are very desirabie 
ones in Ipswich. 
The William Barretts of Chicago are among tue 
new-comers in Ipswich, having taken the George L. De 
Che Feruery Cea Room and Shap 
299 Essex Street, Salem, Mass. 
LUNCHEONS Homr-Mape Breap 
AFTERNOON ‘TEA CAKES AND CANDIES 
Motor Luncheons Prepared on Short Notice 
This fine old estate 
Blois house on the ‘Topsfield road. 
has had some extensive alterations made upon it thts 
season. Mr. and Mrs. De Blois will occupy “Sunning- 
dale Farm,” the home of Mrs. De Blois’ father, the late 
John F. Brooks. 
Mrs. Frances Mower of New York is a new-comer 
in Ipswich this season and is settled in the Cameron coé- 
tage on Newmarch street down near the river and water 
section, 
Among recent arrivals in Ipswich are the Francis 
R. Appletons and Mrs. Daniel F. Appleton of New York, 
who are settled on “Appleton Farms” in their respective 
homes: S. S. Gray of “Heartbreak Hill”; the Herbert W 
Masons of Candlewood karm; Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Phil- 
lips of New York; Dr. and Mrs. B. Robbins and Dr. and 
Mrs. R. B. Osgood on Argilla road; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur 
A. Shurtleff, the landscape architect on Argilla road; 
Prof. and Mrs. C. E. A. Winslow, Argilla road. Others 
who have been here soemtime include the Charles Bohlens, 
who came directly from a pleasant sojourn at Aiken, 
South Carolina; Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Searle and 
family at “Inglisby”; the Bayard Tuckermans at “Suns- 
wick”; Mrs. C. S. Tuckerman at ‘‘Applefield”; the Roger 
S. Warners on Argilla road; and Mrs. M. A. Lord ot 
New York, also of the Argilla colony. 
The Roger S. Warners of Boston are in the Jenkins 
cottage, occupied by them also last summer, while they 
are awaiting the completion of their new home on Argilla 
road, 
Randolph Morgan Appleton, who lost his fine home 
in Ipswich the past winter by fire, has made his home a 
a small cottage on the estate during ‘his prolonged visits 
in Ipswich during the winter season. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry N. Berry of 54 Nahant s*., 
Lynn, who have occupied the William G, Thayer house at 
Ipswich, for the last three or four summers, have leasel 
the Charles Bohlen estate on County Road for this sea- 
son, through the office of Meredith & Grew of Boston. 
All the other unpronounceables may hang their dimin- 
ished heads; Crwgzvdt has arrived. 
HE American Distributing Service, for which so many 
people along the North Shore is working indirectly 
through other societies, distributed during March 198,961 
articles to 336 hospitals, and 2115 articles of clothing and 
supplies to seventy-two families or refugees. The service 
affords a direct means of sending contributions of money 
to the French hospitals and sufferers. This organization 
is sanctioned by the French Ministry of War, which has 
granted the members of the service permission to invest!- 
gate all the hospitals in France (a privilege seldom given 
to foreigners) and the hospitals have been authorized to 
tell their needs to the American Distributing Service. ‘The 
American Distributing Service is under the direction of 
Russell H. Greeley of Boston, son of Mrs. Rufus F. 
Greeley of the “Brownlands,” Manchester. 
Usually the office that seeks the man is the one that 
no man thinks worth seeking, 
