36 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
De Rogers Manse 
Ipswicb Massachusetts 
Special Dinners A la Carte Service 
Afternoon Tea served on spacious lawn 
Delightful Rooms 
JOS. H. BURNHAM, Prop. 
Tel. 85-M 
PSWICH will be fortunate this su:nmer in having Dr. 
and Mrs. Samuel McComb of Baltimore as occupants 
of the Rectory while the Rev. and Mrs. Robert P. Parker 
are on their vacation to a camp in Wyoming. Dr. Me- 
Comb was formerly of Boston and will officiate in the 
Church of the Ascension in July. The church will be 
closed in August. Before leaving Mrs. Parker closed her 
interesting work for the Belgian refugees which she has 
been supporting all winter. About 16 interested friends 
have been meeting at the rectory once a week all winter 
to make surgical supplies. Three hundred garments have 
been made and shipped to France. She started the work 
in December and hopes to continue it this epi Des 
when she returns from the west. 
The work for the French wounded fund, started last 
summer in the Argilla road colony in Ipswich, and carried 
on locally all winter, in charge mostly of Miss Susanne 
Brown of Windmill Hill Farm, resumed its work for the 
summer this Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Herbert Ma- 
son. ‘The meetings will be held Tuesdays and Fridays. 
Mr. and Mrs. Bayard Tuckerman of. “Sunswick” 
have had with them their daughters and sons-in-law, who 
came on to attend the wedding of Miss Phyllis Sears and 
Bayard Tuckerman, Jr., last week. They included Mr. 
and Mrs. William M. Elkins of Philadelphia and Mr. and 
Mrs. G. Hermann Kinnicutt of New York. 
Mrs. C. 8. Tuckerman of “Applefield” has with her 
at the Ipswich home, her daughter, Mrs. Louis Le B. 
Chapin (Julia Tuckerman), of New York, who came on 
for the Tuckerman-Sears wedding and is making her 
usual summer visit with her mother. 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis R. Appleton of “Appleton 
Farms” have had with them their daughter, Mrs. Clar- 
ence L. Hay (Alice Appleton) of Washington, who with 
Mr. Hay came to the wedding of Miss Phyllis Sears and 
Bayard Tuckerman, Jr., and also Mr. and Mrs. William 
Wendell (Ruth Appleton) of Charles River village. 
Mrs. James Marsh Jackson spent last week-end in 
her new Ipswich home on Argilla road, and yesterday the 
family, including Dr. and Mrs. Jackson and their daughter, 
Miss Eleanor, have moved from their Boston home for 
the summer to their new home. Formerly the Jacksons 
have been in Beverly Farms. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Bourne (Gertrude Beals) of 
3oston have again decided to occupy the picturesque old 
Emerson house on the Turkey Shore road in Ipswich. 
Mrs. Bourne is an artist and sculptor and will resume her 
work as before. 
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Dow are in their remodelled 
home on Spring st., in Ipswich. Last year they purchased 
the old Millet place and have made extensive improve- 
ments. Their former home is rented to an artist. Mr. 
Dow is now in New York for a short time at Columbia 
University where he is at the head of the fine arts de- 
partment. 
Mrs. Wilson Shannon Dunn of New York has been 
visiting at the home of her sister, Miss C. B. Dobson of 
Windmill Hill Farm. 
August as usual. 
Miss Eleonore Richardson, since her return from 
school last week, has been entertaining extensively while 
staying at Y° Rogers Manse with her parents, Mr, and 
She will return for the month of. 
Paritan Tea Room 
Montserrat 
Luncheon 12-2 Afternoon Tea 3-6 
Mrs. E. A. Manning 
Tel. Beverly 782-W 
Mrs. Frank H. Richardson of ‘“Meadow View,” Ipswich. 
She has given an afternoon dancing party and a moonlight 
dance in the casino of the Manse, which is a delight fui 
place for such affairs. The Richardsons leave July 6th 
for North Sutton to remain until September. 
Y° Rogers Manse has had an unusually good week 
for a cold and rainy season and finds that it is the fav- 
orite place for Sunday parties in Ipswich this year as well 
as last year. 
Y*® Burnham House tea room has had among its 
luncheon guests Mrs. Arthur J. Blood and a party from 
Lynn; Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore and Mrs. Charles A. 
Sinclair with their respective parties from West Glou- 
cester; the Misses Quill and guests from Beverly; Mr. 
and Mrs. G. B. Paraschos of Boston; Mr. and Mrs. Geo. 
L. Burton,’ Mrs. Ethel Burton and Mrs. Roger O. Burton 
of Beach Bluff. This is a favorite rendezvous for the 
young people from the Oceanside, Magnolia. 
At “Castle Hill,’ the fourth picnic for the Ipswich 
school children was given last Monday as their annual 
treat by Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Crane, Jr. The picnic 
had been planned for Saturday, but was postponed owing 
to the weather. Even on Monday, the children went 
home in a rain storm in the afternoon. Mr. Crane dis- 
tributed about one thousand tickets in the schools for 
the pupils. The tickets are arranged to include the boat- 
ride and ice-cream cones. They were also treated to an 
abundance of lemonade and a box of candy for the return 
trip. Each child always carries its own lunch box. Mu- 
sic was given by a band. Games and bathing were en- 
joyed by the children and all voted it the best picnic ever. 
A number of the teachers and school authorities accom- 
panied the children. This picnic was a special treat on 
account of the dismissal of school on Monday, especially 
for the affair to take place. Mr. Crane always takes the 
greatest precaution for his little guests on his fine stretch 
of beach, and, to insure their safety in bathing, keeps 
policemen on the beach and motor boats patroling the 
water. The Crane picnic has come to be one of the regu- 
lar institutions in Ipswich and is eagerly looked forward 
to by the little folk as soon as the Cranes arrive from 
Chicago. The ride out to the Crane home by water is 
one of the most interesting routes of approach. Leaving 
the wharf at the Ipswich river one beholds in the distance 
Newburyport, Plum Island, Isles of Shoals, Great Neck, 
Little Neck, Castle Hill and the tops of many of the 
summer homes on Argilla road, besides seeing some quite 
distinctly. The river scene is always enlivened by the 
little tugs and pleasure crafts carrying their passengers tc 
and from Little Neck which is quite a busy little resort. 
The high hill on which the Crane home is situated, the 
great rolling sand dunes surrounding it, the “islands” in 
the dunes upon which some of the homes are located,— 
all lend the subtle charm and somewhat mystic beauty 
which seem to surround the place. 
Jerry : Campbell, son of Hon. and Mrs. Charles A. 
Campbell of “Fairview,” took the Ipswich boy scouts to 
the»Harvard meet at the Stadium last Saturday. 
A plain duty is apt to be a disagreeable one. 
Self-love is not only blind, but it is incurable, 
June 30, 1916. 
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