SOCIETY NOTES. 
Samuel Eliot, son of Mr. and Mrs. 
Amory Eliot of Manchester left for 
Washington today for a year to take 
a position as private secretary to the 
secretary of the treasury, A. Piatt 
Andrew, who is a member of the 
Hast Gloucester summer colony. 
Mr. Eliot is a Harvard man and is 
popular among the younger set on 
the North Shore. He will be greatly 
missed here as his visits to the North 
Shore will, needless to say, be in- 
frequent for the next twelve month. 
o°O°°9°9 9 
Every available table and seat for 
the first of the dinner dances at the 
Essex County club next Friday eve- 
ning, July 21, has, been engaged. 
There appears to be an unusual ac- 
tivity this year, and the event will 
undoubtedly be a most brilliant one. 
CLOLORS. 
‘‘Allanbank’’, the summer home 
of Mr. and Mrs. Bryce J. Allan of 
Boston and Beverly Cove, will en- 
tertain a large dinner company Sun- 
day evening. 
009° 
The return of Mrs. Geo. Lee and 
four daughters from Europe has 
brought another of the most prom- 
inent Boston families back to the 
North Shore. Their summer home 
at Beverly Farms is always’ the 
scene of much entertaining. Mrs. 
Lee and two older daughters, Misses 
Marie and Bessie, traveled most of 
the winter in England, France and 
Italy. The two younger daughters, 
Florence and Marjorie, were attend- 
ing school in Paris. 
oOo 99 
There is a pleasant family reunion 
at the John R. McGinley cottage this 
week. Mrs. Lucius J. Knowles and 
young son are there from Marion 
and the little children of Mrs. Ed- 
ward Small Moore (nee McGinley) 
of Chicago have also been paying 
their grand-parents a visit. 
oOo 99 
The three children of Mr. and Mrs. 
G. M. Cushing of Milton concluded 
a five weeks’ visit today with their 
grandmother, Mrs. William E. Lit- 
tleton of Philadelphia and Beverly 
Farms. On their return to Milton, 
they will make the acquaintance of 
the new little arrival in the Cushing 
household. 
o.O590-0 
Miss Wharton has 
Boston after a delightful ten days 
visit with the Amory Eliots, Sea 
street, Manchester. 
o 99°09 
The Montserrat club tennis tour- 
naments start the coming week. 
returned to 
> 
‘NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
EAST GLOUCESTER. 
The Hawthorne Inn, at East Glou- 
cester, is having one of the busiest 
seasons in its history The hotel is 
filled to overflowing and will con- 
tinue to be filled until the first of 
September. Many of the leaders in 
society in various cities of the coun- 
try are represented among the 
guests. Among the names found on 
the register this week are: Miss 
Ciceley Wayland of Philadelphia, 
whose engagement was recently an- 
nounced to Magruder Craighead of 
Boston; Mr. and Mrs. William K. 
Harcourt of New York (Mrs. Har- 
court is better known, perhaps, as 
Miss Alice Fisher, the actress) ; Mrs. 
John R. Crapo of New York, who 
has Orchard cottage; Ex-Mayor Jos- 
iah Quincy and family of Boston; 
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Elger and son 
Elger, Jr.; Miss K. R. Malin, Phila; 
Mr. and Mrs. H. Mareus Denison and 
John M. Denison, Bath, Md.; Grace 
Filkins, the actress, who married 
Rear Adm. Marix, of New York; 
Norman D. Forest, Sanford, S. D:; 
Miss H. Brownell and Miss M. G. 
Brownell, Providence; Arundel 
Holmes Nichols, New York; Mrs. 
William P. Elwell, Miss Rachel EI- 
well, Miss Theodore Elwell, Provi- 
dence; Mrs. Howard 8. Bowie, Miss- 
es Virginia B. and Eleanor H. Bowie, 
Baltimore; Miss Bertha R. Steiner, 
Baltimore; Ann Peppard, Kansas 
City, Mo.; Miss Elizabeth W. Pres- 
ton, Mrs. Andrew P. Preston, Ports- 
mouth; Miss M. lL. Barnes, Brook- 
line; Miss Dorothy Winer, Hyde 
Park; Miss Jane B. Wheeler, Mrs. 
Charles B. Wheeler, Buffalo; Miss 
Marion Dana and Jack Dana, Brook- 
line; Miss Harriet Coburn, Lowell; 
Mr. and Mrs. George G. Dunn, 
Kathryn W. and Lillu B. Dunn, 
Phila.; Theodore K. Miller, Balti- 
more; W. Watters Pagon, Baltimore ; 
Maurice duPont Lee, C. G. Lee, Jr., 
and Miss Marguerite duPont Lee, 
Wilmington, Del.; Misses Jean L. 
and Florence Faulkner, New York 
City ; Miss Belzer and Miss Josephine 
Belzer, New York; Miss Dorothy 
Vandergrift, Wilmington, Del.; A. 
W. Buhler, Boston; Miss Edith 
Woodruff, Brooklyn; Miss Edith W. 
Holden, Weston, Mass., Miss Mar- 
guerite Quackenbush, Mrs. Schuyler 
Quackenbush, New York; Mrs. F. 
M. Harrison, Misses Katherine M., 
Betty and Master C. H. Harrison, 
Montclair, N. J.; Mrs. M. L. Bowe 
and Miss Bowe, ‘Toledo, O.; Mrs. 
Bhoda Holmes Nicholls, New York; 
Miss Elizabeth P. Hough and Miss 
Mary S. Hough, and Miss Annie A. 
Hough, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. E. R. 
Musgrave, New York; Howard M. 
Hart, Dorothy A. Hart, Cincinnati; 
Miss Helen Ryse, Greenwich, Ct.; W. 
A. Rollins, Boston; Miss R. Cum- 
mock and Miss A. Cummock, Bos- 
ton; Mrs. Ross Thompson, Donald 
Thompson, Washington; Miss Char- 
lotte S. Day, Mrs. Belden S. Day, 
Morristown, N. J.; Roger C. Wil- 
liams; Mrs. Frank Williams, Buffa- 
lo, N. Y.; Lowell Cooper, Washing- 
ton, D. C.; Miss Alice Ward Hughes, 
New York; Donald F. Cammann, 
New York; Edward L. Barbour, A. 
C. M. Pennington, New York; Miss 
M. P. Aspinwall, Mary P. Bradley, 
New Canaan, Ct.; Ethel H. and Grace 
Quackenbush, New York; Miss A, 
EK. and E. F. Hitchings, Washington. 
Turk’s Head Inn. 
Prof. Wood of Harvard and a 
party of six Indian students were at 
the Inn for a few days this week for 
an outing. 
Friendly Brazil. 
Brazil is cultivating the good 
will of this country. Dr. Eugenio 
Dahne, special commissioner from 
Brazil, recently wrote to Acting 
Director-General Sefton in part as— 
follows: 1) ig 
‘‘Brazil desires to take a leading 
part amongst the foreign nations 
that will be represented at the Pan- 
-ama-California Exposition and will 
erudge no expense to make an in- 
teresting and imposing show at the 
same. And by right of having been 
the first on the ground, of foreign 
nations, I claim the privilege of pri- 
ority in the choice of the best site 
and largest space for Brazil’s ex- 
hibit.’’ 
Breeze Subscription $2.00 a year 
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