46 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
WBOORMBOOBVBWOOKBRNOOBVBWOOKBWOOBVROOKRBWOOBVBWOOBBOOU 
Ue Burnham House 
THE QUAINTEST PLACE IN ALL NEW ENGLAND 
SOOBBOOBBOORBED 
WROOKBOOMBOOBBOORBOOMBO 
LINEBROOK ROAD ete! IPSWICH IN MASS. 
% TEL. 86-R IPSWICH 
: Has the atmosphere and charm for the motorist who ap- 
$ preciates an unusual Lobster or Chicken Dinner. 
§ AFTERNOON TEA 
3 This is the fifth season under the management of Mrs. Murray 33 
2 
ROOHHOOMBOOHHOOMNOONNOONNOONNOONBOOUNOONNOO 
AMILTON playgrounds opened last Wednesday with 
a good attendance and much enthusiasm. The direc- 
tors are Miss Helen Robertson for the girls and Harry 
Cay for the boys, both coming from Beverly. Sewing 
will be in charge of Miss Woodbury of Beverly. A 
new feature this year will be manual training for the 
boys. The ground is given for the playground by Mrs. 
Thomas P. Pingree of Wenham. The movement is sup- 
ported by both the summer colony and the townspeople. 
The committee consists of the following: N. J. Conrad, 
president; Mrs. Reginald C. Robbins, secretary; Mrs. 
Lydia Rankin, treasurer; Mrs. S. Dacre Bush, Mrs. 
George von L. Meyer, Miss Jessie Johnson, Mrs. H. N. 
Hudson and Mrs. F. P. Trussell. 
Mrs. George D. Sargent is now at Longmeadow 
Farms. Her son’s family, the G. W. Sargents, are with 
ker this summer. Last summer Mr. Sargent’s family 
spent at Rockport, in the Land’s End colony. Mr. Sar- 
gent has been pastor of the Christ church (Episcopal) in 
Hamilton until this spring when he resigned and will 
seek other fields in the fall. Mrs. Clarence Poor and 
family are not with her mother, Mrs. Sargent, on the 
Hamilton farm this year, but are settled in Hyannisport 
on Cape Cod for the season. Mrs. Poor was a recent 
visitor in Hamilton. 
The parish house belonging to Christ church (Epis- 
copal) of Hamilton and Wenham opened last Sunday, 
with services conducted at 10.30 a. m. by Archdeacon W. 
W. Love of Boston assisted by Rev. Frank L. Luce of 
Dorchester, the rector in charge for the past month or 
more. ‘Three years ago in July the first service was held 
in the little church which has been in existence as a 
society only four years and it has had a remarkable 
growth in that time. 
M FERNAND COCHIN will accept a limited 
* number of appointments with North Shore 
residents for conversations in French, relating his 
experiences in the trenches before Soissons. M. 
Cochin has recently returned to this country after 
being discharged from active service because of 
disabilities received in action. 
Individual lessons in French conversation may 
also be arranged. For appointments, write or tele- 
phone. 
M. FERNAND COCHIN 
50 CONGRESS ST., room 1025 BOSTON 
IL Telephone Main 5161 
July 16, 1915. 
We carry a complete stock of 
DRUG STORE GOODS 
Prescriptions our Specialty 
C. H. KNOWLES CoO., THE RExatt STORE 
RAILROAD AVENUE, So. HAMILTON 
- 553 BOYLSTON ST. 
Che Mending Shop “hostow 
Gowns REMODELLED 
SHop GARMENTS SMARTLY FYI?TrED’ 
DARNING AND MENDING 
Tel. B.B. 7988 
Mr. and Mrs. S. Dacre Bush, who are spending the 
summer at Marlboro, N. H., spent last week-end in Bos- 
ton and Hamilton where they attended the opening ser- 
vice of the parish house belonging to Christ church (Epis- 
copal) of Hamilton and Wenham. It was Mr. Bush who 
arranged to have the movable structure used as a head- 
quarters for the Essex Country club at Manchester, 
moved to Hamilton, the past winter. 
The Jonathan Brown, Jr., boys of “Red Top Farm,” 
—Jonathan, 3rd, and Philip—have returned from a two 
weeks’ visit to their grandmother’s Mrs. John Kline of 
Oil City, Pa., and also at Buffato, where they visited their 
great grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Jonathan. They 
will enter St. Paul’s school at Concord N. H., in Septem- 
ber. Mrs. Brown will pay her annual visit to her mother 
in Oil City during August. 
At the Myopia Hunt club many fine thoroughbred 
hunting horses are coming on—those from Baltimore ar- 
riving the past week, and the Virginia and Kentucky 
horses coming later. 
ing a series of weekly races on the club track. Polo 
is on every -Wednesday and Saturday. The polo 
meets of the Myopia and Dedham Country clubs are 
scheduled for Sept. 4 to 18. The caddy boys are still 
holding out in their strike for better pay on their rounds. 
Hon. Nathan Matthews has rented his “Black Brook 
Farm” in Hamilton to Mrs. Albert H. Carroll of Wash- 
ington. Mrs. Carroll is the daughter of Cleveland Perkins, 
who is occupying the Hamilton home of the Reginald C. 
Robbins. Mrs. Matthews and Miss Matthews are spend- 
ing a few weeks in Bar Harbor, at the Belmont. 
Matthews will occupy her new home in Hamilton later 
on. Mr. Matthews stayed at the Myopia Hunt club since 
giving up his farm until this week he sailed for Europe 
on a short business trip. 
BEACON HILL TOBACCO 
MILD and COOL 
Every smoker 
*| is enthusiastic 
+} about its unus- 
ual qualities :: 
INEXPENSIVE 
2o0unces 15c 
8 ounces 45c 
16 ounces 90c 
AA BROMFIECB ET BOSTON 
CHARLES B, PERKINS 60, 
The Hamilton Driving Club is hold- — 
Miss. 
