ys 
Vol. XI 
S SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. Marian Shaw McKean, former wife of Henry 
Pratt McKean, of Pride’s Crossing and 238 Beacon st., 
Boston, will be married Sunday by Rev. W. H. Lyons 
of Brookline to Malcolm Graeme Haughton at the resi- 
dence of her mother, Mrs. Quincy A. Shaw, 241 Perkins 
street, Jamaica Plain. a 
.. Thomas Silsbee has concluded his season’s stay at 
 Pride’s Crossing and has returned to 115 Marlborough 
 st., Boston, for the winter. P 
: o #8 O 
Charles Gibson of Boston and Nahant and Gen. Wm. 
Pew of Salem were among those visiting at the country 
home of Mr. and Mrs. James Barr, for the Hallowe’en 
Party given by Mr. and Mrs. Barr for the village people 
in New Ipswich, N. H. 
o 8 °O 
Herbert Warren Mason and family have closed their 
house at Ipswich and have returned to their Boston resi- 
‘dence at 14 Gloucester st. 
o2 
PY 
‘Mrs. C. S. Hanks of the West Manchester colony 
has been among the North Shore women to interest her- 
self in the Red Cross work. She has made a donation 
to the school children of Manchester who are sewing in 
their classes for the stricken Belgians under the auspices 
of the Red Cross society. The classes are willing to de- 
-yote their time to the work, but are unable to furnish 
‘materials and any contributions toward this end will be 
gratefully accepted. 
oO 8% 9° 
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Bartlett, who have been at 
__ Beverly Farms all summer, will make their home at 43 
Carlton street, Longwood, this winter. They were at 10 
Monmouth Court last A x 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Sargent, Jr., who have 
been spending their honeymoon at the home of Rush 
Street, Maryland, returned to Massachusetts the first of 
the week. “They have a place at Hamilton, which they 
‘will make their year-round home. Mrs. George Lee, Mrs. 
Sargent’s mother, is spending a few weeks at Hot Springs 
with her daughter, Miss Florence. Mrs. Lee entertained 
at dinner last Friday evening in honor of Miss Louise 
Inches, one of this Beorgn oo gputantes, 
Mrs. George Putnam of Boston and Manchester 
closed her North Shore cottage last week, and is estab- 
lished at 191 Commonwealth avenue, for the winter. 
; o2 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Q. A. Shaw of Exeter street, Boston, 
are entertaining quite a bit at their recently completed 
home at Eastham, a charming Cape Cod town, where 
they are spending the autumn. The house has been 
named “Cedar Pines.” Mr. and Mrs. Shaw are of the 
Pride’s Crossing colony, where they have a very beauti- 
ful place called “Pompey’s Garden.” 
o 8 
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Fay have closed their cottage 
at Nahant this week and are again occupying their win- 
ter quarters at 287 Beacon street, Boston, 
(ORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, November 6, 1914 
No. 45 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. R. C. Winthrop and family closed their sum- 
mer home at West Manchester this week and returned. 
to their town house at Walnut st., Boston. Miss Clara 
Winthrop gave a party at her bungalow yesterday, it 
being a double anniversary—though most informal in 
its nature—the birthday of one of those present, Miss 
Alice Thorndike, and also the opening of the bungalow 
for the many happy parties and week-ends during the 
winter. 
3 
Mr. and Mrs. John Martin Graham of Smith’s Point, 
Manchester-by-the-Sea, closed_ their summer establish- 
ment there last week, returning to their Boston home on 
Commonwealth avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. 
Fabyan of the West Manchester colony returned to their 
town house at Boston the latter part of last week. Mr. 
and Mrs. George E. Warren of Manchester have opened 
their Beacon street home for the winter months. 
o 8 OO 
J. H. Walker of Detroit and a party of friends were 
at “Rockledge,” the summer home of the Walker family 
at Magnolia over the week-end. 
o 82:0 
Mrs. I’. Jefferson Coolidge has gone to Boston for. 
the \winter, closing her house at Coolidge’s Point, Man- 
chester. 
o38 90 
Many North Shore people are interested in the piano 
recital which Miss Virginia Wainwright is giving at the 
Tuileries (Boston) next Tuesday afternoon. Miss Wain- 
wright, who is a daughter of Mrs. G. A. Wainwright, 
Longwood, will be assisted by Alfred Gletzen of the Bos- 
ton Symphony orchestra; he will play the viola. 
o 3 0 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gannon Clark of Beverly 
Farms, are to observe their second wedding anniversary 
next Saturday. Mrs. Clark was Mary Head, one of the 
most attractive of the North Shore debutantes of her sea- 
son and one of the first to be married. She married the 
late William Russell, who died shortly after the mar- 
riage. Mr. and Mrs. Clark’s wedding two years ago was 
a charming but very quiet affair. 
3 
Plans are being made for the second Bay State Sut- 
frage Festival, which is to be held at the Copley-Plaza 
Monday and Tuesday, November 23 and 24, and a num- 
ber of North Shore people are among those especially 
active. On the ways and means committee are Mrs. 
Oakes Ames, Mrs. H. P. McKean, Mrs. Louis Agassiz 
Shaw, and on the general committee of men, who will 
assist at the dance are Prescott Bigelow, Jr., and Louis A. 
Shaw. Mrs. Franklin W. Hobbs is the chairman of the 
dance committee and Mrs. H. P. McKean is a prominent 
member of the same committee. The affair will doubt- 
less be even more brilliant than that of last season. Haif 
of the proceeds are to go to the Massachusetts Red Cross 
society. Vaudeville performances, a thé dansant and a 
bazaar in which over 50 cities and towns are to be repre- 
sented, and exhibition of posters and a large dance on 
the second night of the affair are among the varied at- 
tractions, 
