a1. XII 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Mitchell are to spend the 
) at (Manchester, but will go south for mid-winter, 
here they will have a house at Fernandina, Fla. The 
ndrew Carnegie, 2ds, are still in the Adirondacks, after 
ending part of the summer in Scotland. They will 
9 to Fernandina, also, after a stay in New York. Mr. 
id Mrs. Mitchell will stop at Charlotteville, Va., for a 
sit on their way south with their son-in-law and daugh- 
r Mr. and Mrs. Quincy A. Shaw, 2d, who went to 
farm, from Beverly Farms, last week. They have 
‘most extensive place which will be given over to stock- 
, : °o % 
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Lowell Blake are planning 
9 remain at Pride’s Crossing until next Wednesday, when 
ey will return to their Beacon street, Boston, house for 
e winter. They will come to their recently-purchased 
sstate, “Malt Hill,” Beverly Farms, when they return 
> the shore next season. 
°o #8 9 
_ Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Taylor are planning to be 
at the Hotel Brunswick, Boston, this winter and they 
wi _move up from their Manchester estate about the 
rst of November. They have spent the last three win- 
5 s at Manchester, where their daughter, Miss Marcia 
Taylor, is a devotee of the out of door life. Their place, 
which they have named “The Craigs,” will be occupied 
yy Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Stanwood and family, whose 
summer home is next to Ree Geer 
_ ‘The Russell S. Codmans are closing their house on 
Smith’s Point, Manchester, the first of November and 
will move to their town apartmens, 59 Marlborough 
eet, Boston. 
+ 
4 
Chas. K. Cummings and Royal Robbins have de- 
cided to change the rig of the sloop Avenger, and the 
work will be done at Lawley’s where the yacht is laid 
up. It is planned to replace the Avenger’s original rig, 
which requires a longer mast and bowsprit. At present 
the sloop is a semi-knockabout. 
o 4° 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Fabyan and family are 
“among those remaining late on the Shore this season and 
their home at West Menchester is still open. The family 
will return to Boston the first of November. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. Charles Fitch (Ethel Tucker), who 
have the Gorman cottage at West Manchester have taken 
a house on Lime street, Boston, and will soon move into 
it. They will open their house at Manchester occasion- 
ally for week-ends. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, October 23, 1914 
JORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Gurnee and Ector Munn returned on the last trip of 
the Mauretania, on the 16th, and are with their mother, 
Mrs. Charles A. Munn at Manchester. Their brother, 
Charles A. Munn, Jr., and family, will return early in 
November, after several months in Scotland. Mrs. Munn, 
Sr., will remain at Manchester all the autumn, probably 
until Christmas, when she will return to Washington. 
42 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Lincoln have closed their sum- 
mer house at Manchester Cove earlier than usual this 
autumn and are back to their attractive winter home in 
Boston. Their estate at Forest Hills is one of the 
finest in that section and makes a most beautiful spring 
and autumn home as well as winter residence. The 
Harvard Arboretum property adjoins them on two sides 
and Congressman Peters? home on the other. 
oR Oo 
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Henry Barbour are to live in 
Cambridge this winter but will keep their Manchester 
house open for week-ends, motoring back and forth be- 
tween the Shore and Boston. Mr. Barbour has been 
busilly engaged all summer on his books, several of which 
will be published this autumn. 
ou O 
Mrs. Henry C. Weston has concluded her stay at 
Beverly Farms for the season and has returned to her 
Boston home at 177 Beacon st. 
oO 8 O 
Mr. and \Mrs. Walter Yates and Mrs. John C. Howe 
of the West Manchester year-round colony returned last 
week from a motor trip to Cape Cod. 
eo #80 
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Abbott of the West Manches- 
ter colony have retured to Boston for the winter. 
o 8 
Miss Charlotte Read, the younger daughter of Mr. 
and Mrs. Charles A. Read of the Manchester year-round 
colony, left Read’s Island Thursday morning for New 
York where she will study play writing and stage manage- 
ment this winter. Miss Read was very active in the 
theatrical entertainments at the Elizabeth Peabody house 
on Charles street, Boston, last winter and showed great 
ability along that line. 
on O° 
Charles Grafly, the well-known Philadelphian sculp- 
tor, who has a summer home at Folly Cove, Lanesville, 
has been working this season on a monument for the 
Panama Exposition. It represents a pioneer mother with 
her two children, a son and a daughter standing in front 
of her, and it will be set up permanently after the ex- 
position is over at San Francisco. Mr. and Mrs. Grafly 
and their daughter, Miss Dorothy are still at Lanesville. 
Only thoroughly trained | 
|| competent servants (male 
or female) supplied. Re- 
ferences personally and care- 
fully investigated. . 
MISS WILD 
Registry Office 
30S Fifth Ave., N. E. Gor. 3ist., 
Telephones 8822, 8823 Madison Square 
Special Attention Given 
<n to Out-of-Town Orders. 
