ol. XI 
a SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. Boylston A. Beal has been on a few days’ mo- 
wr trip to the Berkshires. Mr. Beal, by the way, who 
as in Berlin at the outbreak of the war, reached Lon- 
don safely, but returned again to the German capital in 
nnection with some governmental matters. His brother- 
in-law, Joseph C. Grew is one of the secretaries of the 
merican embassy at Berlin. 
o 2 ¢O 
Mr. and Mrs. R. 7. Paine, 2d, and their two daugh- 
srs of the Coolidge Point, Magnolia, colony, started this 
norning on a motor trip ie the White Mountains. 
Mrs. Rebecca Colfelt, who has had a cottage at Mag- 
nolia a number of seasons in the past, has taken the J. 
Warren Merrill cottage at Smith’s Point, Manchester, and 
‘will spend the autumn on the Shore. She has just re- 
turned from Europe where she passed through all of 
the trying ordeals incident to the war. 
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_ Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Foster have closed their, 
‘cottage at Fresh Water Cove, this week and returned 
“to their winter home in Washington, where they have 
‘ > . 
‘an apartment at the Portland, Vermont ave. 
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‘The Misses Paine have closed their cottage at Pride’s 
‘Crossing and returned to their town house at 21 Brimmer 
-st., Boston. 
a ono 
4 Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kilpatrick have closed their 
place, “Stonehurst” on the Shore Road at Magnolia and 
have returned to St. Louis. 
s OBO 
'- Wm. J. Boardman and daughter Mrs. Frederick A. 
“Keep, who has been spending the summer at Manchester 
with her parents, left the first of the week for Bretton 
“Woods for a visit. Mr. Boardman remained only a few 
days and Mrs. Keep will return direct to Washington 
" from the mountains. “Windclyffe” will be closed early 
in October, when Mr. and Mrs. Boardman will join Miss 
Mabel Boardman in Washington, where the latter was 
‘called in connection with the Red Cross work the day 
after she went to Murray Bay, Can., for a visit in early 
“August. Mrs. W. Murray Crane was at Manchester 
' last week for a short visit. 
The Sign of the Cranr 
Cea House, Fond 
Slop and 
Woman's Exchange 
OPEN DAILY 
swt 
4) 
any 
| 
its 
9) : 
; 
| 
' | 
; 
| 
Mrs. Geo. R. Dean 
Prop. 
R STREET, MANCHESTER 
Telephone 5 SUMME 
The Wetherbee Estate Opp. Old Cemetery 
Lobster Luncheon 12 to 2 
Antiques from “Ye Olde Burnham House”, Ipswich 
HOME MADE CAKE, ENGLISH MUFFINS end CCUGHNUTS 
mae 
— “nd 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, September 25, 1914 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
No. 39 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The wedding of Miss Marion McGinley and Norman 
Story Mackie of Philadelphia next month will be of in- 
terest to North Shore people, in as much as the Mc- 
Ginleys have spent their summers here for a number of 
years, until the present season. Miss McGinley is next 
to the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Mc- 
Ginley, of Pittsburg. Her two older sisters are Mrs. 
Lucius J. Knowles and Mrs. Edward Small Moore, the 
latter a daughter-in-law of Judge and Mrs. W. H. Moore 
of Pride’s Crossing. The wedding will take place at 
five thirty on Saturday afternoon, October tenth, and 
will be a small home affair. The wedding party will con- 
sist of Miss Lois McGinley as maid of honor; three neices 
of the bride,—Jean Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Edward Small Moore of Lake Forest, Ill., and Sally 
Knowles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lucius J. Knowles of 
Worcester, as flower girls, and Marion Moore, another 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Moore as train 
bearer. The best man will be Clarence H. Clark, 3d, of 
Philadelphia and Manchester, and the ushers will be T. 
Charlton Henry, C. Wolcott Henry, F. Eugene Dixon 
and William H. Mackie, all of Philadelphia, H. Fairfieid 
Osborn of New York, Norman Armour of Princeton, 
N. J., Edward B. Whitman of Tuxedo, N. Y., Bonsal 
Brooks of Baltimore, Frederick Read of Providence, R. I., 
Francis H. McAdoo of Washington, William R. Scott 
and Thomas A. McKinley, both of Pittsburg. 
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Mrs. Gordon Abbott and two daughters of the Man- 
chester colony, are on a week’s motor trip to the Berk- 
shires. 
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Edward C. Richardson and family will close their 
cottage at Magnolia on the 6th of October, and will go 
to their town residence at 9 Bay State Road, Boston. 
Many North Shore cottagers have found the North 
Shore Grill at Magnolia a most delightful “dropping in” 
place the hot days of the past week when out motoring 
or shopping at the stores that are still open at Magnolia. 
The Grill will be open until October.ist, and possibly 
longer if this summer weather continues. Many, luncheon 
and afternoon tea parties have been noticed there the past 
week, and not a few go in for dancing in the evening. 
D. H. MAMPRE 
Ladies’ Tailor 
and IMPORTER 
244 Cabot Street 
(Opposite Y. M. C. A.) 
BEVERLY 
(Formerly in Endicott Bldg., over Bank) 
Telephone 209J 
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. 
