22 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
July 16, 1915. 
CLEANERS 
Rees» Rees 
SUMMER ANNOUNCEMENT 
MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
LEXINGTON AVENUE 
SPECIAL FOUR DAY SERVICE 
Pi JUNE TO, OCi@BERn 
TELEPHONE 484-W 
FREE COLLECTION AND DELIVERY 
New York 
Newport 
Philadelphia 
West End 
Boston 
Magnolia 
Brooklyn 
Greenwich 
Hartford 
Bar Harbor 
Worcester _ Atlantic City 
Narragansett Pier 
NE of the events of early August, that will attract a 
big following of the summer contingent all along 
the North Shore, is the Horse Show to be held at 
“Greenmeadows,” the large estate of Mr. and Mrs. 
George Burroughs at Hamilton (near Asbury Grove). 
Saturday, August 7, at 3 p. m., is set as the date of this 
event, which will be for the benefit of Welcone House, 
one of Boston’s charities. The program will include 
classes for children’s ponies, saddle horses and hunters. 
Music will be by a military band. Tea will be served 
under the direction of Mrs. Herbert Warren Mason of 
Ipswich. At the conclusion of the show there will be a 
pony drag hunt. The committee in charge is composed 
cf Mrs. George Burroughs, Mrs. F. T. Alley, Mrs. J. 5. 
Tawrence, Mrs. Fred Ayer, Jr., Miss Mary Curtis, Miss 
‘lice Thorndike and Miss Julia Appleton. 
Or xen 2 
Miss Virginia Wainwright, the daughter of Mrs.G. A 
Wainwright of Boston, will have a set of two mid-su n- 
mer musicales on the North Shore. The first will take 
place on Thursday, July 22, at Mrs. Bayard Warren’s 
house, Pride’s Crossing, and the second concert will be 
at Mrs. George Lee’s Italian villa, at Beverly Farms, on 
Thursday, August 19. The artists will be Mr. Floyd 
Neale, tenor, Miss Helen Tufts, violinist, Miss Ethel 
Frank, soprano, and Mr. Robert Cuscalen, first violin 
of the Berlin Symphony orchestra. The patronesses will 
be as follows: Mrs. Bayard Warren, Mrs. George Lee, 
Mrs. Lucius M. Sargent, Mrs. M. Graeme Haughton, 
Mrs. Walter C. Baylies, Mrs.-$. Parkman Blake, Mrs. 
W. Scott Fitz, Mrs. George H. Lyman, Mrs. John S. 
Curtis, Mrs. Charles E. Cotting, Mrs. Harold J. Coolidge, 
Mrs. Walcott H. Johnson, Mrs. Henry S. Grew, Mrs. 
Francis L. Higginson, Mrs. J. A. Lowell Blake, Mrs. G. 
Howland Shaw, Mrs. John L. Saltonstall, Mrs. Oliver 
Ames, Mrs. George von L. Meyer, Mrs. William’ L,. 
Putnam, Mrs. John Lawrence, Mrs. Philip S$. Sears, Mrs. 
Harrison K. Caner, Mrs. William H. Moore, Mrs. Fred- 
evick H. Prince, Miss Marion Blake, Mrs. Dudley B. Fay, 
Mrs. Robert T. Paine, Mrs. E. Preble Motley, Mrs: 
Edward S. Grew, Mrs. Thacher Loring, Mrs. Dudley L. 
Pickman, Mrs. Franklin Haven, Mrs. Joan C. Phillips, 
Mrs. William Appleton, Mrs. Alexander Cochrane, Mrs. 
Frederick Parker, Mrs. David Greenough, Mrs. Frank 
kK. Peabody, Mrs. James H. Beal, Mrs. Rebecca McM. 
Colfelt, Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge, Mrs. Robert deW. 
Sampson, Mrs. Alvin A. Sortwell, Mrs. Auzustus P. 
Gardner, Miss Katharine P. Loring, Mrs. J. G. Beals, 
Mrs. Washington B. Thomas, Mrs. J.. Warren Merrill, 
Mrs. S. Reed Anthony, Mrs. Samuel G. King, Mrs. God- 
frey L. Cabot, Mrs. William H. Dewart, Mrs: Henry N. 
Richards, Miss Maigaret Corlies, Mrs. George Burroughs, 
Mrs. Lester Leland, Mrs. Marshall Fabyan, Miss Mar- 
garet Thomas, Mrs. C. Howard Clark, Jr., Mrs. William 
Phillips, Mrs. Leonard Ahl, Mrs. Boylston A. Beal and 
Mrs. Quincy A. Shaw, Jr. 
Oo % O 
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Heinz of Pittsburg are now 
settled in ‘Ledge Leaf,’’ Smith’s Point, Manchester, for 
their second season. ‘Leaf Ledge’ is one of the most at- 
tractive of the smaller cottages on the Point and is de- 
lightfully situated. : 
oO % O 
Mrs. John Lawrence Bogert of New York is spend- 
ing the season with her daughter’s family, the Conover 
Fitches of Chestnut Hill, who are occupying the Church- 
man cottage on Smith’s Point, Manchester. Mr. and Mrs. 
Fitch spent last season at Marion. 
THE SUMMER SHOP 
Conducted by the 
Lobster Lane 
Women’s Educational and Industrial _ Union 
of Boston 
Magnolia 
Telephone 466 
HANDWORK AND CHILDREN’S SHOP 
TEA ROOM AND FOOD. SHOP 
Candy Kitchen Candies 
