4 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
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AANNOUN CEMENT 3 
S 12 
= Green & Swett Co., 737 Boylston St., Boston, announce the opening of their ‘§ 
se: Automobile Accessories’ Branch Store, at 33 Central St., Manchester-by-the- 3 
2! Sea, Monday, May 19, under the management of Thomas J. Quinn. ns 
: 8 ‘S 
2! Our stock will include a complete line of all makes of Tires, Oils and Sundries and they will ‘3g 
= be first quality guaranteed goods. i 
gi ig 
OW BG spiranceetvoue oods GREEN & SWETT CO. & 
charge Boston prices Telephone 182 33 Central Street -:- | Manchester i 
PPA PAA SIDA PAA PPA PALA PAD PALA PAL PAA PP 
S308 eV ee SOMOS SOMWOM 2 
SOCIETY NOTES 
e 
WOBWOBOBVOS 
‘Sagamore Farm,” the summer home of Congress- 
man A. P. Gardner and family, at Hamilton, is open 
for the season. The family has been occupying the Win- 
sor residence on Marlboro street, Boston, since last Oc- 
tober, and the Congressman has been on from Washing- 
ton as much as his official duties would permit. Miss 
Constance Gardner has probably been more entertained 
and feted than any other bud of the past winter. 
oOo 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Curtis and Miss Evelyn Curtis 
are just about starting on their two months’ auto tour 
of the continent. Mrs. Curtis and daughter arrived in 
Cherbourg on the Kronprinz Wilhelm last week. They 
plan to return in early July to spend the summer at Bev- 
erly Farms as usual. 
Herbert M. Sears and Miss Phyllis Sears plan to 
sail from Europe on the Amerika, for New York from 
Cherbourg, the first week in June. Their Pride’s Cross- 
ing house will be open awaiting their arrival this month. 
oe 
oe 
Miss Alexander of New York and the Misses 
Dorothy Jordan, Barbara Burr and Elizabeth Gray are 
to be the attendants at the wedding of Miss Rosamond 
Dixey and Gorham Brooks, which will take place in 
Lenox on Saturday, June 7. 
All roads for those who love the horse will be toward 
The Country club, Brookline, for the open air horse 
show next week on the 22d, 23d and 24th. The com- 
~ittee in charge include Misses Dorothy Forbes, Alice 
Sargent and Harriet Jaques. Herbert Jaques, Francis 
Peabody, Edwin Webster and others, with A. Winsor 
Weld for chairman, are on the official list. Mr. Weld also 
heads the committee for the annual open air horse show 
Memorial day on the grounds of the Longwood Cricket 
club at Chestnut Hill. This will make the toth annual 
show, and from the program is sure to be one of the best. 
The Middlesex and Norfolk Hunts will be represented 
respectively by the masters, A. H. Higginson and Henry 
G. Vaughan. ; 
Only thoroughly trained 
competent servants (male 
or female) supplied. 
Re- 
ferences personally and care- 
: ‘ 305 Fifth Ave. 
fully investigated... Ar eh 
SOCIETY NOTES 
“Lookout Hill,” the summer home of the John Hays 
Hammonds at Freshwater Cove, Gloucester, is being pre- 
pared for the early arrival of the family from Washing- 
ton, where they have passed the winter. Mr. and Mrs. 
Hammond entertained at dinner Sunday evening at their 
Washington home in honor of the newly appointed British 
ambassador, Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, and the new Austro- 
Hungarian ambassador, Mr. Dumba. Other guests at the 
dinner were the Secretary of War and Mrs. Garrison, 
and Major General Leonard Wood and Mrs. Wood, Sen- 
ator John K. Shields and Mrs. Shields, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- 
liam Randolph Hearst, Colonel and Mrs. Stephen Slocum, 
Mrs. Thomas F. Walsh, Miss Elizabeth Hammond, Eric 
Pape, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. H. 
McNeill, Mr. and Mrs. Talbot Williams and Mrs. Hunt- 
ington Williams. 
o 30 
Mrs. George Putnam, who sold her property on 
Smith’s Point last fall to George R. White, in order that 
the latter might enlarge his estate adjoining, will spend 
the summer at the Richards M. Bradley cottage nearby. 
Mrs. Putnam bought a portion of the estate of the late 
Russell Sturgis bordering on Singing Beach last fall, and 
she will probably have a permanent summer home erected 
for her use before another season. 
Miss Ethel Amory of Boston has leased the Mans- 
field cottage at West Manchester for the summer. 
o % 
The date of the two weddings in the Lee family, 
has been arranged,—that of Miss Marie Lee to Oliver 
Turner on June 4, and that of Miss Elizabeth P. Lee to 
Henry Pratt McKean, Jr., on Saturday, June 21, at the 
First Parish church, Brookline. The former couple will 
have the small Lee cottage at Beverly Farms, now being 
put in readiness for them. The latter will pass their 
honeymoon on this side of the Atlantic, and will make 
their home at Wenham Neck, in the colony of young 
people who are making their homes there and in Beverly 
Farms, after rejuvenating old farm land. Mr. McKean 
bought a farm last week. 
MISS WILD 
Registry Office 
Special Attention Given 
to Out-of-Town Orders. 
N. E. Gor. Sist., N. Y. 
Telephones 8822, 8823 Madison Square 
