_ Arthur Adams, 
POR TA-SHORE BREEZE 
Vol. XI 
SOCIETY NOTES 
A large party of young people were 
down the shore last week end, and 
stopped during their stay at the Essex 
County club. Another party will be 
down over the present week-end. 
o2 0 
The annual meeting of the Man- 
chester Yacht club will be held Mon- 
day, Jan. 27, at 3.30 o’clock at the Na- 
tional Union Bank, 4o State street, 
Boston. 
oR8B9 
The Eastern Yacht club of Marble- 
head elected officers for 1913 at the 
annual meeting Tuesday night, as fol- 
lows: Commodore, Robert ‘Treat 
Paine, 2d; vice-commodore, Herbert 
M. Sears; rear-commodore, C. H. W. 
Foster; secretary, Henry Taggard; 
treasurer, Patrick T. Jackson; mem- 
bers of council-at-large, George A. 
Goddard, Frank B. McQuesten; 
regatta committee, Louis M. Clark, 
Henry A. Frothingham, William B. 
Stearns, Frederick M. Hoyt, Henry 
A. Morss; committee on admission, 
Charles P. Curtis, 
Augustus Hemenway, Jr., Robert 
Saltonstall, the secretary, ex-officio; 
house committee, B. Devereux Baker, 
Parkman Dexter, Stephen W. Sleeper, 
Thomas G. Frothingham, Paul D. 
Rust. The club has 673 members and 
the fleet enrolls 345 yachts. 
O29 
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wilson Cutler 
(Leslie Bradley), who were married 
in Boston last month, are among the 
recent arrivals at Miami, Fla. 
OBO 
Miss Katharine Ayer is visiting her 
brother-in-law and_ sister, Lieut. 
George S. Patton, U. §...A,, and Mrs. 
Patton, at their quarters at Fort 
Myers, -Va. 
o8 0 
A son was born Sunday, in Wash- 
ington, to Cong. and Mrs. Andrew J. 
Peters of Massachusetts. Mrs. Peters 
was formerly Miss. Martha R. Phil- 
lips, the daughter of Mrs. J. C. Phil- 
lips of Boston and “Moraine Farm,” 
North Beverly, where her marriage 
to Mr. Peters took place on June 23, 
1910. Mrs. Peters is the sister of 
_ Dr. John C. Phillips, and of William 
Phillips, who. has been secretary of 
the American embassy in London. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, January 17, 1913 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The marriage Wednesday week of 
Miss Cintra Hutchinson and Hallo- 
well Vaughn Morgan, at Holy Trinty 
church in Philadelphia, was the most 
brilliant society event of the week in 
the Quaker City. The bride is the 
daughter of Sidney E. Hutchinson, 
who has a delightful summer estate 
on West Beach, Beverly Farms. Fol- 
lowing the marriage at noon there was 
a reception at the Hutchinson home 
on upper Walnut street. 
98° 
The annual fair in aid of the In- 
dustrial Schoot for Crippled and De- 
formed Children will be held at the 
Copley-Plaza, Boston, on Thursday, 
Feb. 6, from 10 to 6, and the follow- 
ing day from Io to 12. 
oN oO 
Mr, and Mrs. Chas. E. Mason gave 
a dinner-dance Wednesday night at 
the Somerset, Boston, for the for- 
mer’s sister, Miss Miriam Mason. 
O89 
Mrs. Bryce J. Allan gave one of the 
largest and most important dinner- 
dances of the week at her Beacon 
street, Boston, home, Thursday night, 
for her neice, Miss Hope Norman. 
Mrs. Q. A. Shaw will give a dinner 
for Miss Norman at the Copley-Plaza 
on Jan. 21. Informal. dancing will 
follow the dinner. 
o# > 
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Tyson, who 
came on. from Chicago to spend 
Christmas with Mrs. T'yson’s mother, 
Mrs. Bradley, are on a trip to Pana- 
ma. They were expected to land in 
New York on the 16th of this month, 
and after a brief visit to Boston they 
will retuhn to their Chicago home,on 
Goethe avenue. 
o & 
Miss Margaret. Sigourney Cotton- 
Smith will have among her brides- 
maids, at her marriage to Guy Emer- 
son in St. John’s church in Washing- 
ton on Tuesday, the 28th, her cousins, 
Miss Violet Thayer of Southboro, and 
Miss Mary Wood and Miss Harriet 
Post of New York; also in the group 
will be Miss Julia and Miss Alys 
Meyer. The young girl’s father, the 
Rev. Dr. Roland Cotton-Smith, rec- 
tor of the church, will officiate. The 
Cotton-Smiths summer at Ipswich. 
No. 3 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Three important golfing fixtures 
for the present year have been decid- 
ed upon as follows: The open cham- 
pionship of the U. S. will be played 
June 4 and 5 at The Country club, 
Brookline; the national amateur 
championship, week of Sept. 8, at 
Garden City golf club, and the wo- 
men’s championship at the Wilming- 
ton Country club, week of Oct 13. 
O80 
Mrs. Boylston A. Beal gave a pretty 
luncheon party at the Chilton club, 
Boston, Tuesday, for her neice, Miss 
Jane Morgan, a debutante of the last 
New York season. 
Oo 8 
Robert T. P. Storer has been chosen 
captain of next fall’s football team at 
Harvard. Storer is the son of Mr. 
and Mrs. John H.. Storer of Man- 
chester, Waltham and Boston. 
o% 9 
Society will have plenty to attract 
in Boston tonight. The most impor- 
tant event of the week will be the 
fancy dress dance by Mr. and Mrs. 
John S. Ames, at their Dartmouth 
street house, for their neice Miss 
Olivia Ames, the daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. Oliver Ames. Tonight, too, 
Mrs. R. L. Agassiz gives a dinner for 
Miss Margery Lee. Dr. and Mrs. C. 
A. Porter, also of the North Shore 
colony, are givng an at home today 
at their Boston residence to meet Dr. 
and Mrs. Harvey Cushing. 
*% O° 
The members of the ’88 Sewing 
circle for 1913, of which Mrs. Char- 
les Hopkinson of Boston and Man- 
chester is the president and secretary, 
are: Mrs. J. W. Bartol, Mrs. C. M. 
Cabot, Mrs. A. D. Foster, Mrs. E. A: 
Crockett, Mrs. W. A. Wadsworth, 
MrsisBo'A. \Codmany?’Mrs:* ROP. 
Snelling and Miss Snelling, Mrs. ‘T. 
R. Sullivan, Mrs. Charles Hopkinson, 
Mrs. Harcourt Amory, Mrs. J. L, 
Smith, Mrs. K. G. T. Webster, Mrs. 
W. 5S. H. Lothrop, Miss A. M. Sturgis, 
Mrs. J. A. Lowell. Mrs: G. H. Monks; 
Mrs. R: F. O’Neil, Miss M.’ E. Wil- 
liams. The guests for the winter 
are, Mrs. Harvey Cushing and Mrs. 
5S. Warren Sturgis. The circle meets 
Wednesday afternoons at the homes 
of its members in Boston and vicinity 
