NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Vol. X. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, May 17, 1912 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clay Frick 
of New York and Pittsburg, have 
arrived at Eagle Rock, their country 
place at Pride’s Crossing. Miss 
Helen Frick has been at Eagle Rock 
for a few days awaiting the arrival 
of her parents. She is engaged in 
planning the work on a house at 
Wenham to use for the entertain- 
ment of working girls, as she has in 
past seasons at the Stillman and 
Melville houses. The Fricks_ will 
stay at Pride’s Crossing until late 
in the season. 
oe 02 %% 
oe ve ve 
Clifford S. Walton, an interna- 
tional lawyer, author and _ soldier, 
consul-general for Paraguay in this 
country for several years, and 
graduate of West Point, died at his 
Washington home Wednesday, after 
a short illness, of pneumonia, at the 
age of 51. Mr. Walton served on a 
number of international law com- 
missions, including controversies be- 
tween the United States and Peru, 
Chili and Salvador, and studied law 
at the University of Madrid, Spain, 
being as far as known, the only na- 
tive American lawyer who was a 
licentiate in Spanish law. He was 
the author of ‘‘The Commercial and 
Maritime Laws of Latin-America.’’ 
He was buried in Arlington Nation- 
al cemetery today. He was a mem- 
ber of the Army and Navy and 
Chevy Chase clubs. 
of 02 % 
ve ve ee 
The Washington B. Thomases are 
planning to open ‘‘Netherfield,”’ 
their Pride’s estate, tomorrow for 
the season. 
oe o % 
ve oe ve 
Miss Mabel Boardman of Wash- 
ington and Manchester, headed the 
receiving line at the recent recep- 
tion to the foreign delegates to the 
Red Cross convention at the capital. 
This late spring function of the capi- 
tal season was given at the Pan- 
American Union building. Fifteen 
hundred attended. Assisting Miss 
Boardman were Secy. and Mrs. 
Meyer, Mrs. Winthrop Murray 
Crane. Mrs. Nicholas Longworth 
and Mrs. Levi Z. Leiter of the North 
Shore contingent and many other 
distinguished people of official 
Washington. Rites: tha 
No. 20 
MAGNOLIA COTTAGERS 
Magnolia will number = several 
new cottagers among the lessees of 
property this season. Among them 
will be Miss Margaret Corlies, the 
author, of Philadelphia, who has 
been in Europe the last two seasons. 
She was previously, for a number of 
years, a regular guest, with her 
mother, at the Oceanside. Miss Cor- 
lies has leased the Joslyn cottage. 
The Edward H. Grahams of Bos- 
ton, who had a cottage on Bridge 
street, Manchester, last season, have 
leased the William Newton place at 
Magnolia this year. 
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Doane Cook 
and their young offspring of Boston, 
will have the Story cottage. The 
Cooks have been regular guests at 
the Oceanside since their marriage, 
but last year they did not come to 
the seashore. This will be their first 
year as cottagers. 
The Athertons, too, will have a 
cottage this year, having leased 
Shore View, one of the Rehn cot- 
tages, on Magnolia Point. Mrs. 
Atherton is one of the oldest Bos- 
tonians coming to Magnolia, both in 
point of age and number of seasons 
she has been coming. With her 
three sons, Frederick, Perey and 
Dwight, she has usually spent the 
summer at the Oceanside. 
The E. Prescott Rowes of Boston, 
who had the E. S. Foster cottage on 
Summer street last season will have 
the Williams cottage this year. 
George H. Swift and family—Mr. 
Swift the Boston manager of the 
well known firm of Swift & Co., 
will have Mrs. Wilkin’s cottage this 
season. They had the Cammann 
cottage last year. 
Other lessees of cottages at Mag- 
nolia include: Mrs. J. T. Clark of 
Jamaica Plain, the Foote cottage 
(renewal); C. T. Harbeck of New 
York, the Fred Lycett cottage; 
Henry L. Strong of Jamaica Plain, 
an apartment in Sea_ Reaches; 
Arthur M. Jones, Boston, the H. H. 
Newton cottage; G. W. Bill, of 
Hartford, Ct., renewal of the E. G. 
Foster house, Shore road; Henry 
Schmidt, of Washington, D. C., the 
Butler cottage. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Curtis Guild of Boston, United 
States ambassador to Russia, was a 
passenger on the Kaiser Wilhelm I, 
which sailed for New York at 1 
o clock Wednesday. 
oe te os 
ee ef 6¢ 
Miss Elizabeth W. Perkins’ of 
Boston and Beverly Farms has been 
elected one of the counsellors of the 
Cireolo Italiano at their recent an- 
nual meeting at the home of Mrs. 
Arthur Moore Morse at Brookline. 
oe oe 4, 
vo ve 
Judge William Caleb Loring and 
Mrs. Loring of Gloucester street, 
* 
se 
Boston and Pride’s, were recent 
guests in Lenox. 
oe 0% of 
ee @f 0¢ 
The marriage of Miss Claire 
Means, daughter of Mrs. Arthur Tat- 
tle of 35 Commonwealth avenue, 
Boston and Beverly Farms, and An- 
dre Nicholas Reggio, son of A. C. 
Reggio of the Empire, Boston, will 
take place Wednesday, June 19, at 
Miss Means’ home on Common- 
wealth avenue. The young people 
have taken a house at Beverly for 
the summer, 
$3 83 
There appears to be a tendency 
among Magnolia cottagers to arrive 
on the shore a little earlier than in 
former years. A number of the 
above will arrive during the coming 
week and nearly all the rest will be 
domiciled by the first of June. 
oo O00 Os 
ve ve ve 
The Rev. Roland Cotton Smith of 
the Ipswich colony officiated at the 
services in St. John’s Episcopal 
chureh in Washington last Friday, 
for the late Clarence Moore, late of 
the Pride’s contingent. The com- 
pany ineluded only the relatives 
and a few intimate friends. After- 
wards, at Mrs. Moore’s request. Dr. 
Smith repeated the rites for Henry 
(. Harrington, Mr. Moore’s servant, 
who went down with him en the 
Titanie. 
Mrs. Gardiner M. Lane of Boston 
and Manchester, has had as her re- 
cent guest, Miss Achsah Preston of 
Baltimore. one of the Country e¢lub 
coterie. She is the daughter of Mrs. 
J. Alexander Preston of the Ridge- 
ley-Carroll family. 
