~~" 
ol. XII 
= SOCIETY NOTES 
_ The Henry C. Fricks plan to leave Pride’s Crossing 
oward the middle of November for New York city, 
vhere they will pass most of the winter. Mrs. Frick 
as been in New York the past week giving her personal 
ttention to some of the final details looking toward the 
pening of their new home on Fifth ave. The house 
nd grounds take up a whole block and is one of the 
randest of the new residences in the Metropolis. Miss 
frick has been entertaining at Pride’s Crossing, Miss 
Polly Dixon of fee cpiia, 2 sister of Mrs. Childs Frick. 
Robert M. Winthrop, who has been spending a fort- 
might at Lenox, is again at the summer home of his 
‘mother, Mrs. Robert C. Winthrop at West Manchester. 
‘The family is planning to remain at West Manchester 
until nearly the middle a November. 
" Mr. and Mrs. Samuel D. Warren, who have been at 
‘Manchester this season, are having a large country home 
‘built for them at Essex. Work is progressing rapidly 
‘and the house will soon be finished. Mrs. Warren was 
Miss Helen Thomas. 
_ o 8 O° 
"Mr. and Mrs. Roger S. Warner of the Beverly Farms 
‘summer colony returned to their town house at Boston 
‘last week. They had the Adams cottage at Beverly 
Farms. 
a oR 
_ A wedding which will be of interest to North Shore 
‘people is that of Miss Martha Catherine Gunn, daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. James Newton Gunn, of New York and 
Beverly Farms, and Frederick Gordon Hostetter, son of 
“Mr. and Mrs. D. Herbert Hostetter of Beverly, at St. 
_ Thomas’ church, New York, next Thursday afternoon at 
four o’clock. 
Owing to the illness of Mrs. Gunn there 
will be no wedding reception. The young people will 
_ make their home at Broad Run, Va., where they will be 
at home after Decemeber 1. 
o 42 ¢ 
Ipswich Village, include Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Wiggles- 
worth, Dr. and Mrs. Lloyd J. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Fran- 
cis Meredyth Whitehouse, the Misses Curtis, all of Man- 
chester; Mrs. L. C. Fenno, Rowley; Mrs. H. E. Shaw 
and Mrs. E. G. A. Isenbeck of Swampscott; Miss C. B. 
country drive. 
Dobson, Ipswich. From Lynn, Salem, Danvers, Hamil- 
ton and Topsfield come many on purpose for the waffles 
and hot coffee that make such a pleasant motive for a 
Old English and Southern recipes are 
used. The “Rose Tree” remains open until Nov. 25th. 
_ The guest register has addresses from San Francisco to 
» 
New York city, and from Bangor, Me., to Porto Rico. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, October 30, 1914 
October guests at “Y° Ancient Rose Tree Shop,” 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
No. 44 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Coolidge will open their 
winter house 170 Beacon street, Boston, the first of Nov- 
ember, but will spend week-ends at Blynman Farm, Mag- 
nolia, for some weeks later. They usually are at their 
Magnolia estate for the Thanksgiving and Christmas 
holidays. 
Oo % 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Higginson of the West Man- 
chester summer colony are to close their house at West 
Manchester by the last of this week and return to Boston 
for the winter. 
Oo 8 
Mrs. Myron C. Wick and her family closed their 
attractive summer residence at Manchester and left Fri- 
day for Youngstown, Ohio. 
o 8 
Among the late stayers at Manchester this season 
will be Mrs. Richard Monks and her daughter, Miss Grace 
Monks, who will remain on the shore into Decembez, 
after which they will probably take an apartment in Bos- 
ton for a while. 
o 8 
Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert F. Day-have returned to their 
winter home at Boston after closing their cottage at Ham- 
ilton where they have spent a long season. Mrs. Day was 
Miss Elizabeth Richards. 
o 8 =0 
Mrs. Thomas Dwight and her daughter, Miss Mar- 
garet, are again in Boston for the winter. They have a 
summer.cottage at Nahant. 
o 8 
Mrs. Adeline F. Fitz will not close her home at 
Beach Bluff until early in November when she leaves for 
Washington and her estate at Inverness, Florida. Mrs. 
Fitz is planning to return to Boston for a short time in 
January. 
Oo 8 
The fifth annual convention of the American Associa- 
tion for Study and Prevention of Infant Mortality meets 
at Boston, November 12, 13 and 14 and many of the peo- 
ple prominently connected with it are North Shore people. 
Mrs. William Jason Mixter of Boston and Swampscott 
will assist Mrs: Edward H. Bradford, at a tea which will 
be held the first day at the Harvard Medical school. Mrs. 
Mixter is the president of ‘““The Wives of Aesculapius” 
an organization.of about 100 doctors’ wives whose hus- 
bands form the Aesculapian club and all of these ladies 
will assist in serving. Mrs. William Lowell Putnam of 
the Manchester colony, will be in charge of a sight-seeing 
trip to Cambridge and the Harvard Union. 
Oo 8 O° 
Yearly subscription to North Shore Breeze, $2.00. 
- 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., N. Y. 
Telephones 8822, 8823 Madison Square 
Special Attention Given 
to Out-of-Town Orders. 
