NORTH SHORE BREEZE | 
Vol. X. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The annual meeting of the Massa- 
chusetts Humane society was held 
recently at the home of Charles 
F. Adams, 2d, 117 Commonwealth 
avenue, Boston. It was preceded 
by a dinner. Among the _ offi- 
cers elected were several North 
Shore summer residents, namely,— 
President, Dr. J. Collins Warren; 
first vice, Dr. George B. Shattuck ; 
second vice, William Caleb Loring; 
treasurer, Francis C. Welch; cor- 
responding secretary, Henry fF. 
Sears; recording secretary, Charles 
P. Curtis. Standing committee: 
Charles P. Curtis, chairman; Francis 
C. Welch and Charles F. Adams, 2d. 
Finance committee: Francis L. Hig- 
ginson and C. F. Adams, 2d. Audit- 
ing committee: Francis L. Higgin- 
son and William C. Endicott. To 
act as trustees for the Boston Ly- 
ing-in hospital in behalf of the Hu- 
mane society: Drs. J. Collins War- 
ren and George B. Shattuck. Trus- 
tees: Dr. J. Collins Warren, Dr. 
George B. Shattuck, William C. Lor- 
ing, Francis L. Higginson, Francis 
C. Welch, Henry F. Sears, Charles 
P. Curtis, Charles F. Adams, 2d., 
William C. Endicott, Henry S. 
Howe, Theophilus Parsons and Ro- 
bert Homans. . 
22 8 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Curry, 
_Jr., of Pittsburg and Magnolia were 
among the prominent guests of the 
““Steel City,’’ who attended the bril- 
liant cotillion given in the ballroom 
of the Pittsburg Golf club by Mrs. 
Remsen V. Messler of Morewood 
avenue, Pittsburg, last Friday night. 
It was given in honor of Miss Lucy 
Starling Kay, who has been enter- 
tained on the North Shore at Man- 
chester by the Misses Lois and 
Marion McGinley. An _ immense 
-arch of rambler roses, daisies, cro- 
tons, farleyense ferns and palms 
were used in decorating the ball- 
room. Pink, white and erimson 
out en force to enjoy the function. 
28 3 
Mrs. George Lee of Brookline and 
Beverly Farms, was among. the 
guests at the recent brilliant recep- 
tion which the United States ambas- 
sador at Rome and Mrs. O’Brien 
gave late in March, 
Manchester, 
Mass., Friday, 
SOCIETY NOTES 
A eup has been donated by Her- 
bert W. Mason of Boston and Ip- 
swich, for the indoor athletic meet 
of the Ipswich YMCA and the Na- 
hant YMGA, at the Beverly YMCA 
oymnasium, which is now under ar- 
rangement. The trophy will be 
known as the Mason cup. The Ip- 
swich team now holds the champion- 
ship of the northern Essex group 
and the Nahant team the southern 
district championship and the win- 
ner of the meet will become the 
champion of the. entire county. 
Three prizes will be awarded, the 
winners of first prizes will be the 
champions in that event. Mr. Mason 
was a former summer resident of 
Manchester. He now has a spacious 
and beautiful estate on Hartbreak 
road, Ipswich. 
22K 
Francis J. Cotting of Pride’s 
Crossing, is again president of the 
Industrial School for Crippled and 
Deformed children on St. Botolph 
street, Boston. Other officers elected 
at the nineteenth annual meeting are 
as follows: Vice president, Charles 
F. Atkinson, Joseph 8. Bigelow, Liv- 
ingston Cushing, William Endicott, 
Jr., J. Grafton Minot, Francis Shaw 
and Amory A. Lawrence; treasurer, 
E. Pierson Beebe; secretary Thomas 
K. Cummins; trustees, these officers 
and Augustus Thorndike, E. H. 
Bradford, Augustus Hemenway and 
Charles H. Taylor, Jr. Officers were 
chosen by the trustees as follows: 
Mrs. George S. Parker, assistant 
treasurer; Francis J. Cotting, chair- 
man; Mrs. BE. G. Cutler, Mrs. H. G. 
O. Colby, Mrs. F. W. Thayer, Mrs. 
George S. Parker, Dr. Augustus 
Thorndike and Dr. James S. Stone 
secretary, executive committee. 
2228 
Mrs. Nathan G. Horton, who is 
now making her home in the vicinity 
of New York city, was in Boston for 
the Easter holidays, which she 
passed with her mother and sister, 
Mrs. Joseph Hall and Miss Maria 
Hall, on Brush Hill, Milton. Mrs. 
Horton served as chaperone for Mrs. 
Lathrop Brown (Helen Ilooper) up 
to the time of her marriage. She 
was for several seasons with Mrs. 
Brown at West Manchester, 
April 19, 1912 
No. 16 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
Reed P. Anthony, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. 8. Reed Anthony of Boston and 
Beverly Farms, was one of a party 
of seven boys from the Country Day 
school, Newton, who Clarence H. 
Estey of Brookline, father of one of 
the party, carried to Panama, re- 
cently. The trip to the canal was of 
rare educational value to Master An- 
thony and his boy friends. <A three- 
day stop was made in Jamaica, 
where autos were taken across the 
island, a distance of 61 miles. Some 
of the exciting features of Master 
Anthony’s trip were a collision with 
a runaway team while driving in 
Panama City, the very close call 
from a bullet of a Panama ‘‘Joy- 
Shooter,’ and the overturning of one 
of the autos on a steep and narrow 
mountain road at night. The fol- 
lowing boys comprised the party: 
Reed P. Anthony, J. Oliver Beebe, 
Ralph G. Crimmins, W. Lowell 
Downes, Edward S. Esty, Jose C. 
Harris, and Stephen B. Ives. 
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One of the interesting events of 
the post-Haster season took place 
Saturday at the Hotel Somerset, 
3oston, when Lyly’s picturesque 
‘‘Endymion,’’ with its Shaksperian 
pageant, was given at 2.30 and 8.15 
p. m., in aid of the Tau Beta Beta 
Scholarship Fund, which maintains 
a graduate of the Brookline High 
school at Simmons College. The 
performance was arranged by Miss 
Ruth Burechenal of the Festival 
Committee, Playground Association 
of America. Among the patronesses 
were Mrs. J. Dellinger Barney of the 
Ipswich colony, Mrs. Philip Dexter 
and Mrs. Clement 8. Houghton. 
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Mrs. Clarence Moore and Mrs. W. 
Murray Crane, the latter Miss Mabel 
Boardman’s sister, were two of the 
patronesses for the recent benefit 
for the Day Nursery Dispensary for 
which Mrs. A. J. Parsons opened her 
Washington ballroom. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Prince 
of Boston and Wenham Neck, who 
have been spending the winter in 
Pau, Franee, as is their custom, 
reached New York last Wednesday, 
being passengers on the Olympic, 
