NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Vol. XV 
SOCIE- EY] NOTES 
The unprecedented demand for summer cottages 
along the North Shore—especially the section including, 
Beverly, Pride’s Crossing, Beverly Farms, Manchester 
and Magnolia—keeps up, despite the war situation. It 
shows what people think generally as to the result of war 
—that they are more sate on the North Shore, than in 
their city homes. More houses are open this week, more 
shutters have been removed from doors and windows and 
more people are actually living in the residences, than on 
any first week in April in the history of the North Shore. 
Everything points to an early season all along the line. 
The chances of a German submarine picking its way 
among the hidden reefs and jagged rocks of the North 
Shore to get near enough land to fire a shot, is about as 
remote as the possibilities of the German fleet itself being 
able to get out of its “bottle” into the Atlantic ocean— 
and North Shore people know it. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Edgar C. Rust of 55 Devon road, 
Brookline, will be among the new-comers to Manchester 
this season. They have just leased the George Peirce 
house at Old Neck. (Mr. Rust is a Harvard ’04 man. 
Mrs. Rust was SNA E.. Wrecks: 
Other new-comers in the same section will be Mr. 
and Mrs. Robert Livermore (Gwendolen M. Young) of 
Boston. They have just leased for the season Dr. Brown’s 
small cottage at Old Neck, in the vicinity of Brownlands. 
Mr. Livermore is a Harvard ’oo man. ‘The Boston home 
of Mr. and Mrs. Livermore is at 23 Charles River square. 
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‘Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Hayward (Anna H. Lloyd) of 
Wayne, Pa., will return to Manchester for the summer, 
and will again occupy Dr. Brown’s “Grove’’ cottage at 
Old Neck. 
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Martin Erdman of New York has leased for the 
summer Mrs. John Caswell’s place at Beverly Farms. 
This, and all of the above rentals, were made through the 
office of T. Dennie Boardman, Reginald and R. deB. 
Boardman of the Ames Bide. Boston, and Manchester. 
© 
Mr. and Mrs. Taaee. Adamowski of 23 Chestnut 
st., Boston, will return to West Manchester for the sum- 
mer. Instead of occupying the Clarke cottage on the H. 
L. Higginson estate, which they have had the last two 
seasons, they will occupy the small cottage usually occu- 
pied by Mr. and Mrs. Alex H. Higginson during their 
mid-summer visit. Mr. and Mrs. Adamowski will move 
down early in May. 
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Mrs. John W. Lavalle of 353 ‘Marlboro st., Boston 
will again spend the summer in the Sanborn cottage at 
Nahant, which she occupied last year. Mrs. Lavalle’s sis- 
ter, Mrs. Vittorio Orlandini, and her children will pass 
the summer with Edward C. Johnson at Nahant, father 
of Mrs. Orlandini and Mrs. Lavalle. Mrs. Curtis Guild, 
another sister, has not as yet made her plans for the 
season. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Geo. B. Poole of ‘Chestnut Hill expect 
to move down to Beverly Farms in May. They will oc- 
cupy their own house, on Hale street, formerly owned by 
Dr. Warren. 
cP BOL Se: 
Mrs. Edwin S. Webster of Manchester and Boston 
is at Palm Beach. 
Manchester, Nileans Eecida April 6, 1917 
at Nan 14 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Thomas P. Beal, the well known Boston banker, has 
opened his summer home on the Neptune boulevard, Bev- 
erly Cove, for the season, maintaining his record of sev- 
eral seasons of being among the first to open their shore 
homes for the season. Mr. Beal has one of the most at- 
tractive estates in the Cove colony, with a beautiful man- 
sion house and well kept grounds. He is keenly interest- 
ed in Beverly affairs and even when he goes to Boston 
for the winter keeps close touch on what 1s happening in 
Beverly. 
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Mr. and ‘Mrs. Bayard Tuckerman, Jr., have returned 
to Pride’s Crossing atter pee sojourn in the South. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Alvin F. Sortwell are back to their 
home in South Hamilton, from St. Augustine, Fla., where 
they have been sojourning. They were accompanied by 
Mrs. Sortwell’s sister, Miss Katharine Pollard, who has 
been at St. Augustine with them. 
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Among the arrivals at Marblehead Neck are Mr. and 
Mrs. Herman Parker of 60 Commonwealth ave., Boston, 
who have opened ‘‘Whitegate,” their attractive home on 
Nanepashemet st., for the season. 
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Mr. and Mrs. William Sheafe have returned to Bos- 
ton from spending part of the winter in Santa Barbara. 
They will come to their estate at East Gloucester this 
month. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Robert Treat Paine, 2d, and their 
family are leaving Boston in May for Magnolia, where 
they will spend the summer as usual. They will not pass 
the intermediate season in Brookline, as is their usual cus- 
tom, for they are having a new music room added to their 
house, on which account it cannot be occupied for the 
present. 
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Mrs. Isaac G. Lombard of Chicago will return to the 
North Shore the coming summer, as is her custom. - She 
has engaged an apartment in Oceanside hotel at Mag- 
nolia and will come on about the first of July to spend 
July and August by the seashore. 
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The wedding of Miss Linda Scarritt, daughter of the 
Rev. Dr. and Mrs. William Russell Scarritt of 182 Bay 
State road, Boston, and Leverett Saltonstall Tuckerman 
of Boston and Ipswich, will take place on Saturday, June 
2, in the Church of the Advent, Boston. It will be quiet 
and no reception will follow, on account of mourning in 
Mr. Tuckerman’s family. 
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Says the San Diego, tale Reena Tribune of March 
26, relative to a well known Boston and North Shore 
young woman: “Miss Eleanora R. Sears, the noted 
woman polo player and athlete, appeared in Justice J. 
Edward Keating’s court this morning with her riding boots 
on and, without comment of any kind, paid into court $25 
in bills in payment of a fine imposed for speeding with an 
automobile. Miss Sears was arrested on the coast high- 
way north of Oceanside by Deputy Sheriff William Lan- 
dis, and she took the officer’s word for it without a 
demurer that at the time she was moving her machine 
along at the rate of 48 miles an hour. ‘Twenty-five dol- 
lars’ was the comment of the justice, and the offender 
before the bar lost no time in adding that amount to the 
state road fund,” 
