22 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
June 23, 1916. 
De Rogers Manse 
Ipswich Massachusetts 
Special Dinners A la Carte Service 
Afternoon Tea served on spacious lawn 
Delightful 
Rooms 
JOS. H. BURNHAM, Prop. 
Tel. 85-M 
Welcome guests in Ipswich this summer will be Mr 
and Mrs. Robert Haydock of Milton whose wedding oc- 
curred early in June in the Arlington street churca im 
3oston. Mrs. Haydock was Miss Ruth Harrington ctf 
Ipswich, where her mother, Mrs. Francis b. catia oe 
has one of the most attractive of the Argilla road estate 
Miss Harrington was active in the Montserrat club ga nes 
of last season and has many friends in North Shove 
circles, 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bohlen are planning to leave 
carly in July for Bar Harbor where they will spend the 
surmer. Their house on the County road will be oc- 
cupied by Mr, and Mrs. Henry N. Berry of Lynn, who 
had the Thayer house last season. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sears (Susan E. S. Drake) oi 
229 Beacon street, Boston, are spending their first season 
in Ipswich at “Meadow View,” the Frank H. Richard- 
son house on the County road. 
Rev. and Mrs. J. B. Seabury of Wellesley Hills and 
Miss S. D. Mason of Boston were over-night guests at 
Y° Rogers Manse in Ipswich when they care to attend 
the wedding of Miriam Mason and Franklin FH. 
Trumbull last-Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Mason 
also entertained at luncheon on Thursday at the Manse, 
their guests being the relatives from Boston, who came to 
the wedding, and some of the ushers. 
Miss 
Ye Burnham House ‘Tea Room in Ipswich has had 
several additions and alterations this season. The most 
noticeable is the new private dining room finished in pea- 
cock paper and | laving a cheery open fireplace. A chauf- 
feur’s dining room is also a valuable addition. Kitchen 
space has been added and extra space for serving tea and 
for dancing has been made by building a large screened 
porch in the rear of the tea room. This as well as the 
tea room is lighted by quaint old lanterns. “Two cham- 
bers have been added so that guests can be accommodated 
over night. Everything is bright with its new coat of 
paint and this most attractive of North Shore tea houses 
is now ready for its summer visitors. Its antique shop 
was never so full before of hand-made rugs, high an: 
low boys, gate-legged tables, old china, pottery from New 
York, baskets and a host of things. Mary Elizabeth can- 
dies are for sale. 
ENHAM’S 
through the 
and (SHawins W. 
range of the Essex County Rifle clu», 
efforts of James H. Proctor of Ipswich 
Taintor of Topsfield has been havius 
some interesting meets lately There are now about 
sixty members in this range, and the entire county clu» 
has 300 members. The meets in Wenham are held in the 
upper floor of the car barn. 
Mrs. Charles ‘T. Parker entertained at luncheon ai 
her home “Cotshabbie” in Wenham last Monday. 
The Special Aid society for American Preparedness 
has a strong branch in Wenham. There are 40 members 
with an average attendance of 30. A lecture committee 
with Mrs. FE. B. Cole as chairman and a parole committe 
with Mrs. John C. Phillips at the head are doing a goo 1 
work. One lecture has been given in the town hall at 
which Sinclair Kennedy and Hon. George von L,. Meyer 
spoke. A big preparedness parade is planned for Aug. 
Puritan Tea Room 
Montserrat 
A charming place to entertain your friends 
Mrs. E. A. Manning 
Tel. Beverly 782-W 
12. ‘Lhe vast need of the work has been brought home to 
the Wenham and Hamilton community through the re- 
ports of conditions existing in France, as seen by Dr. 
John C. Phillips of Wenham, who has recently returned 
trou work with the Harvard unit. Mrs. Phillips, Mrs. 
Alanson L, Daniels and Mrs. Charles T. Parker of Wen- 
ham are the officers of the society. 
Dr. John C, Phillips and his brother, William Phil- 
lips of W ashington and Wenham Lake, with the assist- 
ance of a few friends , are planning to send ten or more 
boys to Plattsburg. Already four boys have been sent 
from North Beverly and Salem. 
Mrs. J. Porter Brown, Mrs. E. B. Cole, Mrs. Frank 
A. Magee, Miss Mary C. Burnham, Miss Wilkins, Mrs. 
John W allace and Mrs. J. H. Gifford, composing the ex- 
change committee of the Wenham tea house, had lunch- 
con in the tea room last Monday. Mrs. Brown, chairman 
of the committee, had the tables daintily decorated 
baskets of forget-me-nots. 
Mrs. James B. Pickett of Wenham gave a luncheoi 
at the tea house in honor of Mrs. Chas. H. Learoyd, Mrs. 
Harry I. Thayer and Mrs. Andrew D., Fuller of Wake- 
field. Among other guests at the tea house have been 
Mrs. L. Carteret Fenno, the Rodolphe Agassizs, the Dr. 
J. H. Laneashires, Mrs. M. Graeme Haughton, 
H. Hostetter and Mrs. W. H. Coolidge, Jr. 
Wenham showed its conservative spirit uniquely in 
the recent holiday parade in Beverly. The committee 
wished to show a contrast between the old and the new 
in fire department apparatus, so Wenham’s hand-tub was 
used as a background .or Beverly’s up-to-date engine. 
AMILTON-WENHAM playgrounds will be.as usual 
on the Pingree field. Harry Gay of Waterbury, Conn., 
will be in charge with an assistant from the Sargent 
school in Boston. Officers are N. J. Conrad, president; 
Mrs. Reginald. C. Robbins, secretary; Miss Lydia EK. 
Rankins, treasurer. The summer colony has always had 
a special interest in the welfare of the organization. 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Seavey have opened “Fox- 
croft,” after spending the winter in Chestnut Hill. Their 
young daughter, Miss Eleanor Seavey, is the proud pos- 
sessor of a new horse which she is fond of riding on the 
Hamilton roads these days. 
Mrs. George D. Sargent will spend the summer as 
usual at ‘Longmeadow Farms,” but her son and family, 
the Rev. and. Mrs. Winthrop Sargent will spend the sum- 
mer. at Peekskill, N. Y. 
The Jonathan Brown, Jrs., of Boston opened “Red 
Top Farm” early in June.. Mrs. Brown’s aunt, Miss 
Annie Ernst of Buffalo, N. Y., has spent three weeks at 
the farm and has now returned home accompanied by 
little Miss Gretchen Brown. Jonathan Brown, 3rd, will 
return this week from St. Paul’s school at Concord, N. H. 
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Codman are again occupying 
their home in Hamilton on the Farms road, which they 
had rented last year to the Francis W. Sargent, Jrs. The 
Sargents are now living in Dedham. 
Mr. and Mrs. Reginald C. Robbins, who have rented 
their Hamilton home to the Isaac R. Thomases of Bos- 
ton, are in North East Harbor, Me., for the summer, the 
same as last year. ‘They spent the winter in Hamilton. 
Mrs. 
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