NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
VOL. IX 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1911. 
NO. 32 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
August has inaugurated a continuous round of en- 
tertaining. Dinners and luncheons in generous num- 
bers have been on the social calendar all the week and 
will continue through Saturday. The children of the 
summer colonies have been active also and have enter- 
tained and been entertained very delightfully. On 
Sunday, Ellis Dresel gave a luncheon for fourteen at 
Pride’s. On the same evening Mrs. A. P. Gardner 
eathered twelve dinner guests at her Pride’s cottage 
“end was hostess for a luncheon party on Thursday. 
Monday evening also Alexander Steinert and wife gave 
Beverly, on Monday. 
summer home 
a dinner at Hospital Point, Beverly. 
other friends were entertained. Wednesday Mrs. Guy 
Norman gave a luncheon party at Beverly Cove, as did 
the Wm. A. Slaters of Washington and Prince street, 
Leverly. Mr. Slater, who has been in very poor health 
this season, was able to enjoy the occasion and assume 
his duties as host to the great pleasure of his guests. 
°° °° 
Wednesday evening Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Ames of 
Boston gave a dinner party at Pride’s. There were 
covers for eight. 
oOo 9004 
About thirty ladies and gentlemen were bidden to 
a dinner dance at ‘‘Villa Crest,’? the W. D. Denegre 
at West Manchester, Tuesday evening. 
oOo 9° 0 
Mics Hull of Newton concluded a three weeks’ 
visit wi. Miss Annie Rice of Boston and Burgess Point, 
N. W. Rice, Miss Rice’s father, 
who is in very poor health, and Mrs. Rice are spending 
a very quiet summer. They enjoy motoring and pay 
irequent visits to their son at Ipswich, who has a heauti- 
ful estate on Turner Till. 
0°90 9° 
Master Charles Taft helped sail J. If. MWammond, 
*Jr.’s yacht, the Swallow, to victory and first place in 
last Saturday’s race of the Annisquam yacht club. 
0° 9° 9° 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Schafer of New York and 
Peverly, entertained Mr. Sehafer’s brother, Leonard 
Schafer, and wife, over the last week-end. The Schafers 
are prominent in brokerage circles in New. York having . 
seats in the stock exchange. They do business under 
the firm name of GC. F. Schafer & Co. The Schafers 
have a country estate at Larchmont, near New York. 
990 O09 
Miss M. H. Magee of Boston, is finding her Ober 
street, Beverly, estate very restful after her tour of the 
yorld during the past winter and spring. She has many 
friends enjoying her hospitality at Beverly each week 
and her brother, Frank A. Magee, and family, of Wen- 
hem, make frequent visits. 
oOo90 09 
Miss Clara Winthrop is sailing for America August 
29 after a very interesting and enjoyable trip abroad. 
Much of her time and travels have been devoted to 
Norway. Her sister, Mrs. Forbes of Dover, will re- 
main with her mother until after Miss Winthrop’s 
return, 
New York and 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
The summer sojourn of Andrew Carnegie, 2d, and 
family at Raequette Lake, New York, has been saddened 
by the sudden death of Coleman Carnegie, a brother of 
Mr. Carnegie, and a member of the Carnegie family 
party stopping at the lake. The deceased was a nephew 
ot Andrew Carnegie, Sr. Ile died Monday at the house 
of Samuel Jenkins, an Adirondack guide, at Patten 
Mills, near Glens Falls, N. Y. He was thirty-one vears 
old. With his mother, Mrs. Thomas Carnegie, and his 
sister, Mrs. Naney Hever, Mr. Carnegie had been on an 
cuting at Raequette Lake and he had left them to go on 
a fishing trip with the guide. He contracted pneumonia 
and died before help could be summoned. Mr. Carnegie 
belonged to prominent clubs in his home city. He had 
made frequent visits to the North Shore as the guest of 
the Andrew Carnegie, 2ds. 
oOo 9° 4 
The wedding of Miss Anne B. Lindsay, daughter of 
the late Dr. John S. Lindsay of St. Paul’s church, 
Boston, and J. A. Lowell Blake of the same city was 
solemnized Monday afternoon at Trinity ehureh, York 
Ilarbor, Maine. The bride was attended by Miss Minna 
Lyman, daughter of Hon. and Mrs. G. H. Lyman of 
the Beverly Farms colony, and Barrett Wendell, Jr., 
oi the Pride’s contingent, served as Mr. Blake’s best 
man. Robert Codman, bishop of Maine, performed the 
ceremony. At the reception, which was held at the 
summer residence of Thomas Nelson Page, the noted 
author of Washington, there was quite a North Shore 
representation, including G. If. Lyman, Jr., Miss Ellen 
Dalton, Dr. and Mrs. Marshall Fabyan, Hon. and Mrs. 
George HI. Lyman, Col. W. D. Sohier and Miss Aldis, 
sister of Mrs. Richard M. Bradley of Brookline and 
Manchester. 
oO 9° O 
Miss Juhette Higginson of Boston and Pride’s, is 
enjoying a visit at Murray Bay, Canada. 
OOZES 
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Munn, Jr., returned to West 
Manchester, Tuesday, from a two weeks’ visit in Maine. 
OF OEORO 
Mrs. Bernard C. Weld was the hostess for a dinner 
party at her Beverly Farms summer home Monday eve- 
ning. There were covers for eight. 
o¢Oo9O 4 
Rear Admiral Pillsbury, retired, of Washington 
and Magnolia, was in Rockport last Saturday afternoon 
to visit Capt. Usher of the North Atlantie squadron. 
Rockport owes much of her popularity as a U.S. Naval 
station to Rear Admiral Pillsbury, when he was captain 
end chief of staff of Admiral Evans, as he was very 
instrumental in giving Rockport that honor and was 
quick to appreciate her harbor facilities. 
oOo 9° 90 
A distinguished equestrian noted on the North 
Shore drives is Frederick Ayer of Boston and Pride’s. 
Ile usually takes his morning ride with some of the 
younger members of the family and his horsemanship is 
particularly noticeable by contrast. Few men of Mr, 
Ayer’s years continue such a pastime, 
