36 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
North Shore Market 
McDonatp & Focarty, Props. 
P.O. Block, Beach St., Manchester-by-the-Sea 
Dealers in Finest Quality 
PROVISIONS--POULTRY--GAME 
Fruit and Vegetables 
OF ALL KINDS IN SEASON 
CREAM 
Telephone 228 
AGENTS FOR MIXTER FARM 
J. A. Conley, Mgr. 
Smith of Salem gave a luncheon for eight and James 
Goodman of Chicago and Annisquam entertained recently. 
Nathaniel S. Simpkins, a season guest, has returned from 
a trip to North Fast Harbor, Me. 
Y° Burnham House has had among recent guests 
Richard Henry Dana of Manchester, and also Mr. and 
Mrs. George Wigglesworth and Mr. and Mrs. Philip P. 
Chase. Mrs. C. C. Converse has been among the Mag- 
nolia guests. The delicious luncheons and dinners, served 
in private piazzas are ever the attractive features of the 
place. 
AMILTON will not have its customary horse show 
this August at “Green Meadows,” the home of Mr.. 
and Mrs. George Burroughs. So many of the men and 
boys usually taking part in this affair are away, either in 
camp or on the Mexican border, that it was thought best 
not to have the show. It will take place, however, next 
year, as usual. The show of last year, benefiting Wel- 
come House in Boston, was one of the stellar events of 
the season. Mrs. Burroughs has kindly offered the use 
of the fine grounds for her ‘friends during August on 
Sunday afternoons. These will be delightful private 
affairs in which all who enjoy a good jump can find no 
better place in Hamilton than on these grounds. The 
Burroughs estate is situated on the Topsfield road and 
has many natural advantages and points of beauty. Mrs. 
Burroughs is exceedingly fond of horses and is always 
among the riders in the Myopia hunts. 
Henry C. Perkins joined his family last Sunday in 
their new home, ‘Green Court,” Miles River road, Ham- 
ilton. This was formerly “Windacre,” the $. Dacre 
Bush place, but the name has been changed by the Per- 
kinses since they purchased it last fall. Mr. Perkins has 
been in Alaska for the past two months. Their son, 
Cleveland Perkins, Harvard ’15, is with the American 
MODERN Regent 
TELEPHONE 8340 
Aug. 11, 1916. 
Telephone 67 
Established 1845 
SHELDON’S MARKET 
H. F. Hooper, Manager 
Dealer in First-Class 
Provisions, Poultry, Game, Vegetables, etc. 
CENTRAL STREET, MANCHESTER 
PRIDE’S CROSSING BEVERLY FARMS MAGNOLIA 
legation in Copenhagen, where he went last fall. Mrs. 
Boyd, widow of Capt. Boyd of the Army, has been down 
from Rye Beach for a short visit with Mrs. Perkins. 
At the home of the Hon. George von L. Meyer in 
Hamilton last week a tea was given and the winning 
numbers were drawn for the loving cup and the diamond 
and onyx pin offered at the recent Italian Festa at their 
place. Mrs. Whitney Warren of New York won the 
beautiful cup, presented by her Royal Highness the 
Duchess of Aosta. Miss Marion Fenno won the pin, 
which Charlton & Co.. of New York presented. Little 
Miss Elizabeth Hitt, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. S. 
Reynolds Hitt of Beverly Farms, drew the numbers from 
the bag. 
The Hamilton-Wenham playground girls played 
schlaug ball last Saturday with the girls from the Mack | 
park playground in Salem, resulting in favor of the Ham- 
ilton girls, 65-51. Tomorrow they are playing with the 
Beverly girls. 
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin F. Sortwell of Hamilton returned 
from Maine, where they had been visiting Mr. Sortwell!’s 
peop'e, in time for last Saturaay’s polo game at Myopia. 
Mrs. Sortwell’s mother, Mrs. A. Wilder Pollard of Fast- 
ern Point, and the latter’s sister, Mrs. Charles Clucas of 
New York, were guests that day and accompanied Mrs. 
Sortwell to the club. Interesting and attractive are the 
new homes in Hamilton of the Sortwells and Gerard 
3ements, the adjoining grounds of which are being laid 
out and planted in a most artistic manner. Both are 
old houses remodeled in keeping with their time by Mrs. 
John B. Moulton of Hamilton. The Sortwell house is 
quite large and sets somewhat back from the road, while 
the quaint little house of the Bements, dating back to 
1721, is quite close to the much-traveled road leading past 
Myopia. Not far from these houses is “Brookfield,” the 
Moulton estate, where a cottage on extensive lines and 
G a Tt a os e FIREPROOF 
H. M. BATER, Proprietor 
Opposite Post Office and Railroad Station, Manchester-by-the-Sea 
Repairing and Overhauling a Specialty 
ACCESSORIES and TIRES 
Limousines and Touring Cars for Hire by the Hour, Week or Season 
Regent Repair and Machine Shop at Lansdowne St., Boston, near Fenway Park Baseball Grounds 
