Nar te SE 
S HOR # 
BREEZE 13 
W. C. LANGLEY & COMPANY 
BANKERS AND BROKERS 
19 Kilby Street, Boston 
Members of New York and Boston Exchanges 
10 Wall Street, New York 
SUMMER BRANCH OFFICE 
OCEANSIDE HOTEL, MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
Our office is equipped with a direct wire to Boston and New York and we offer every facility for the 
_ execution of orders in all markets. 
We cordially invite you to use this office in the transaction of any business that you may have during 
the summer months. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Social life on the North Shore 
the present week has centered in 
the Essex County club. The weekly 
concert Wednesday, as usual, drew 
a brilliant gathering. There were 
nearly, a hundred at the club for 
luncheon and during the concert 
later in the afternoon nearly two 
hundred teas were served. Among 
those entertaining at luncheon were 
Mrs. J. Warren Merrill, seventeen 
covers; Mrs. James MeMillan, six; 
John C. Kerr, fourteen; Mrs. Ger- 
ard Bement, six; Miss Ruth Harri- 
son, ten, George H. Crocker and 
others. The invitation golf tourna- 
ment Thursday, today and Saturday 
is drawing a lot of people to the 
club and tonight the first of the din- 
ner-dances will be held. This will 
be the most brilliant social event 
of the summer to date. For a fort- 
night practically every table has 
been engaged. Among those who 
will lAve tables are: Mrs. Gardiner 
M. Lane, for sixteen ; George E. War- 
ner, eight; Amory Eliot, four; Mr. 
Guinness, six; Albert Kienlin, seven; 
J.C. Kerr, twelve; Charles Little- 
field, eight; Lester Leland, twelve; 
James ©. Barr, eight; H. K. Caner, 
eight; W. B. Thomas, eight; C. No- 
bokoff, seven; D. H. Hostetter, eight ; 
Richard S. Lovering, eight; R. F. 
Tucker, ten; Mrs. F. Dresel Smith, 
eight; J. W. Blodgett, six; Mrs. D. 
B. Hussey, four; Mrs. C. A. Munn, 
Jr., fourteen; Robert Bentley, six; 
S. C. Rowland, eight; E. C. Fitz, ten ; 
W. W. Cook, four; H. G. O. Colby, 
three. 
: oOo90 9% 
Mrs. John L. Bremer of Boston 
aud Manchester is at Walpole Inn, 
Walpole, N. H., for a sojourn. 
60909 ; 
Charles W. Ward and family of 
Brookline have opened their summer 
home on Sea street, Manchester, for 
the remainder of the season. 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
The date of Judge W. H. Moore’s 
private horse show, at the Moore 
private track, at Pride’s Crossing 
has been set for Saturday, August 
26. This is the one social out-door 
event of the summer that is looked 
forward to with much interest by 
North Shore cottagers, who are for- 
tunate enough to be invited to the 
o°Oo°9° 9 
Thursday the altered course of the 
Essex County Club, Manchester, had 
its first competitive baptism in a 
large way, when golfers from far 
and near assembled for the three-day 
invitation tournament. This, and the 
invitation tournament in August will 
give golfers an excellent idea of 
what is ahead of them when it comes 
to the Massachusetts amateur cham- 
pionship, which is to be played on 
the course at Manchester Sept. 4 to 7. 
Some of the players contesting were 
A. F. Sutherland, G. F. Willett, Paul 
Moore, R. Cutting, S. Sargent, 
Count L. de Chambrun, R. F. Gan- 
nett, G. H. Crocker, Dr. Lancashire, 
C. E. Hubbard and Robert Bentley 
of Essex County; A. D. Locke, W. K. 
Farrington, Allen Hubbard, R. W. 
Newell, Walter Holbrook, W. H. Vin- 
eent, B. W. Estabrook, Harry L. 
Ayer, C. C. Bell and H. A. Stiles of 
Brae-Burn; V. C. Longley of the 
Wannamoisett County Club, R. I.; C. 
H. Gardner of the Agawam Hunt 
Club, R. I.; Thomas Russell, L. 8S. 
Bigelow, R. G. Shaw and W. HH. Can- 
tebury of The Country Club; F. B. 
Tracy, G. M. Brooks, N. H. Seelye 
and E. R. Rooney of the Winchester 
Country Club; Henry de Ford of 
Cohasset; F. H. Hoyt and I. F. Mar- 
shall of Allston; E. T. Manson and 
J. A. Talbot of the Framingham 
Country Club; F. W. Broadhead of 
Salem; D. C. Balsewell of the Pitts- 
burg Golf Club, and G. W. Watts of 
the Baltimore Country Club. 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
_ It is expected that the Normandy 
Peasants’ Market, at the estate of 
Mr. and Mrs. 8S. V. R. Crosby, West 
Manchester, Friday, September 1st, 
will surpass all other out-door fune- 
tions of the summer on the North 
Shore. The affair will be given for 
the benefit of the Sunnyside Day 
Nursery. There will be twelve 
booths with barkers and side-shows 
in the French manner, and with 
French names over the entrances, 
giving the fair a true Norman as- 
pect. Among the  patronesses al- 
ready announced are Mrs. William 
Appleton, Mrs. Walter C. Baylies, 
Mrs William R. Burnham, Mrs. 
Alexander Cochrane, Mrs. P. V. R. 
Ely. Mrs. J. Murray Forbes, Mrs. 
Henry Clay Fish, Mrs. John L. 
Gardner, Mrs. Edward S. Grew, Miss 
Charlotte H. Guild, Mrs. Henry L. 
Higginson, Mrs. James R. Hooper, 
Mrs. Arthur Hunnewell, Mrs. Wm. 
P. Lyman, Mrs. Hamilton Perkins, 
Mrs. William R. Burnham, Mrs. 
Francis W. Sargent, Mrs. Robert G. 
Shaw, Mrs. Wm. H. Taft and Mrs. 
Washington B. Thomas. 
0999 
A sale of embroideries from the 
Scuola d’Industrie Italiane of New 
York will be held on Tuesday July 
25 from ten to six o’clock at the resi- 
dence of Miss Newell, Carnegie 
cottage, Summer street, Manchester 
Cove. The marked success of last 
year’s sale leads to the hope that this 
season’s enlarged supply of novelties 
will meet a similar reception. All 
interested are invited to inspect the 
beautiful work of this school. 
Miss Anna‘ M. Bingham of Bos- 
ton, has returned to Manchester-by- 
the-Sea for the summer, and is pre- 
pared to make engagements by the 
day for dressmaking. She is at 6 
North street, Manchester. 
