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NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Vol. XI 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The W. H. Wellingtons will be 
missed from the colony at Manches- 
ter this year. For several seasons 
they have had the George M. Morgan 
house on Smith’s Point, but that es- 
tate was sold last fall to Mr. Kosh- 
land of Boston. -Mr. Wellington 
hopes to locate on the North Shore, 
however, and will probably occupy 
the Longworth place at Pride’s Cross- 
ing. 
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stockton re- 
turned to Manchester Tuesday after 
a ten days’ visit with the Quincy A. 
Shaw, 2ds, who have a cottage at 
Palm Beach for the season. 
oO #2 OS 
Mr. and Mrs. Lathrop Brown 
(Helen Hooper) are leaving New 
York for Washington on the 27th of 
this month to take up their residence 
there. Mr. Brown is the new mem- 
ber of Congress from St. James, 
Long Island, his all the year round 
home. Mr. and Mrs. Brown have 
named their second daughter, born a 
few weeks ago, Camilla. 
Oo 8 © 
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leland, who 
have been in Europe since early in 
January, expect to return the last of 
this month. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, March 14, 1913 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The splendid spring weather of the 
last week has occasioned much activi- 
ty among the summer _  cottagers, 
bringing many from the city to the 
sea-shore to “look-over” their prop- 
erty and make preparations for minor 
improvements on the estates, and in 
a great many cases for opening 
houses. From now on there will be 
occasional “arrivals” until the mid- 
dle of April, when the cottages will 
be opened by the dozens. Many fam- 
ilies are making a practice of arriving 
early in April and this will be none 
the less true this year. The “season” 
is becoming longer every year. Not 
a few families are making a practice 
of keeping their houses open all win- 
ter ,and going away for the summer, 
notably the Whitehouses, who live at 
Manchester all winter so as to be near 
their son in Harvard, and then go to 
Europe for the midsummer. The 
Eben Jordans, too, spend the spring 
and autumn at their West Manches- 
ter estate, but go to England for the 
mid-summer. 
% 
Miss Abby Hunt of the Beverly 
Cove colony, who sailed for Europe 
two weeks ago, will be joined later 
by her sisters, Mrs. R. D. Evans and 
Miss Belle Hunt. 
No. ll 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Amory Eliot and 
daughter, Miss Eliot, expect to return 
from the south on the 27th of this 
month. They will come to their house 
at Manchester, which has been open 
all winter. 
oe 
ve 
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald L. Hoyt of 
New York city, who had the Wm. 
Endicott, Jr., cottage on Neptune 
street, Beverly Cove, last season, will 
have the same place the coming sum- 
mer. 
F. K. M. Rehn of the Magnolia 
summer colony, is giving an exhibi- 
tion of his landscapes this week and 
next at the Mackbeth Gallery, Fifth 
avenue, New York. The paintings, 
many of which have been seen at his 
North Shore studio, include the fol- 
lowing: The Autumn is Old, Spring- 
time, Christmas Day 1912, Septem- 
ber Moonrise, When the Woods are 
3are, A World of Asters and Golden- 
Rod, An October Carnival, Snow- 
Drifts, Autumn-Rock Creek, Wash- 
ington, D. C., The First Snow--Noon- 
tide, The First Snow—Late After- 
noon, The First Snow—In the Even- 
ing Light, The Last Gleam, Indian 
Summer and “No fruits, no flowers, 
no leaves, no birds—November!”’ 
aA Ncsmey cat Wats bane ses 
ESSEX COUNTY CLUB, MANCHESTER. 
Destroyed by Fire Last Night. Nothing is Left Standing This Morning But the Four Chimneys. 
