14 NORTH 
SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
HENRY HAVELOCK PIERCE, Photographer 
729 Boylston St... 
STUDIOS. = 
-Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. 
741.. Fifth Ave. 
Boston, Mass. 
New York City 
THE ORIGINAL HOME PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHER—SITTINGS AT HOME IF DESIRED 
Artistic, Discriminating People Appreciate Mr. Pierce’s Photography 
That Indefinable Finish, Story Telling Quality, and Life Action Stamps the Pierce Prints Above All Others. 
Telephone 
Imported platinum papers used exclusively 298 Pierce Pictures are ‘“Different’’ 
Manchester 
ASGONOMO HOUSE, Manchester, is retaining “Night”; J. Willard Tuckerman as a Mexican; Elsie 
many of its season guests this first September week 
and until the hotel closes will probably have a good 
complement of sojourners in the house. The manage- 
ment announce the closing of the Masconomo on or 
about the 15th of this month. Mrs. Frank A. Hyatt of 
New York has been spending a week at the Masconomo. 
Mr. Hyatt was a guest there earlier in the season. EF. G. 
Watkins and family of Gardner have been spending a few 
days this week at the hotel. They are friends of Mr. 
and Mrs. Louis Carleton, also of Gardner. J. Willard 
Tuckerman of Brookline was a guest of Miss Elsie Mor- 
rill of New York over Saturday night, coming for the 
masquerade party. W. D. Parsley has been a guest of 
the Misses Johnson this week. The latter will remain the 
balance of the season. R. W. Ralston of Dallas, Tex., 
joined his parents and family at the Masconomo this 
week. Miss Addie Greenwood of Cambridge was among 
those at the hotel for a few days. W. Gordon McCabe 
of Charleston, S. C., joined Mrs. McCabe this week; 
she has been on the shore all season at one of the Mas- 
conomo cottages. A large assembly attended the mas- 
querade party held in the Casino last Saturday evening. 
Many clever and original costumes were noted, especially 
among the ladies. Miss Marion Ralston, garbed as a 
Turkish maiden, took first prize for the most effective 
costume. Jack Wood of Dallas, Tex., dressed as a Ger- 
man comedian, captured first in the comics. Others in- 
cluded Harry Ralston as a Chinaman; Miss Mabel Fay 
as an Indian maiden; Alfredo De Castro of the Urugua- 
ian embassey as a sailor; Miss Florence Marshall as a 
man in full evening dress; Mrs. E. F. Van Deventer of 
New York as a daisy girl; Mrs. A. L. Race, representing 
Hlur de £. & £. 
Longboys 
They are a delicate slim shape 
of excellent quality 
BOXES OF 25—$2.13 PER BOX 
| Estahbronk & Eaton 
Boston 
These and others of our well known brands can be had at the cigar stands 
in North Shore hotels and clubs 
Morrill of New York as Columbia; Miss Dorothy Morriil 
as Pierrette; and Miss Mary Wogan as a riding girl. 
Mrs. A. G. Wood of Dallas, Tex., recently returned to 
the Masconomo from a trip to Montreal, Can., in com- 
menting upon the effort of the European struggle in the 
Dominion, says that the war has cast a veil of gloom 
over all Canada. She describes the sight of the troops 
leaving Montreal as a sad one, hundreds of relatives and 
friends of the departing soldiers seeing them off at the 
steamship piers. 
3 
One of the marriages of the coming winter that is 
of interest to the North Shore colony will be that of 
Miss Esther Turner and Laurence W. Morgan, the lat- 
ter a son of George M- Morgan of Boston, who formerly 
summered at Smith’s Point, Manchester. The date has 
not yet been selected, but the wedding will be solemnized 
in St. Paul’s church, Brookline. The engagement was 
announced in July. Miss Turner is a daughter of Mr. 
and Mrs. William D. Turner of Brookline and New- 
castle, N. H. She “came out” last winter. 
oR O 
Robert M. Winthrop, who is spending the summer 
with his mother and sister at West Manchester, has been 
visiting his aunts, the Misses Ellen and Ida Mason in 
Newport the past week. He is expected home Sunday. 
Nothing definite has been decided as yet when he will 
return to England to resume his services with the Amer- 
ican embassy in London. Keen anxiety is felt for the 
safety of Mr. and Mrs. J. Grant Forbes (Margaret Win- 
throp) and family, who make their home in one of the 
suburbs of Paris. 
D. H. MAMPRE 
Ladies’ Tailor 
and IMPORTER 
244 Cabot Street 
(Opposite Y. M. C. A.) 
BEVERLY 
(Formerly in Endicott Bldg., over Bank) 
Telephone 209] 
Mr. Mampre already numbers among his pat- 
rons many of the North Shore’s most exclusive 
families, and he solicits a further patronage of 
North Shore Ladies. 
