36 NORTH 
pleasure to you. 
A photograph of your child wy 
Louis Fabian Bachrach 
taken among the familiar surroundings of home, will always be a source of 
During the summer, some especially beautiful outdoor effects can be had 
in the garden or among the rocks of the seashore. 
Our North Shore office will be open June 15th at 
34 Bridge Street, Manchester 
(Main road between Manchester and West Manchester) 
Before that time you can get us by phone or by dropping a line to our Boston Studio: 
665 Boylston St. 
SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Worcester Studio: 1 Chatham St. 
and service part of the house is in keeping with the whole 
plan. On the second floor five chambers, two with fire- 
places, a sleeping porch and two baths are provided. The 
attic includes three rooms and a bath for servants, and 
large storage space. The house was planned by William 
Downes Austin of Boston and William A. Barry of Dan- 
vers built it. Arthur A. Shurtleff is responsible for the 
improvements on the surrounding grounds to give the 
house an attractive setting. From the house extended 
harbor and other views are possible. 
N Smith’s Point at Manchester an attractive bunga- 
low has been built for Mrs. Walter H. Harris of 
Salem, on the same estate on Proctor street which in- 
cludes also four large houses, each with spacious lawns 
with stables and other buildings. ‘The bungalow is from 
private plans and was built by A. M. Killam of Man- 
chester. It is situated in a thick grove of tal lwalnut 
and oak trees, and big boulders beside the house add to its 
picturesque setting. The bungalow is of two stories 
with pitched roof and shed dormers. It has a broad piazza 
with pergola top and shingled balustrade. Its interior 
plan is on a much larger scale than the exterior would 
suggest. There is a long living room with a fire-place 
of tapestry brick and carved panels. The small stairway 
leads from this room to the floor above. A small lounging 
room, dining room, kitchen, laundry, and two bedrooms 
complete the lower floor, and the second floor has three 
bedrooms, a square hall, a bath and two rooms with bath 
for servants’ use. ‘The interior finish is quite attractive 
and the bungalow well illustrates how comfortable and 
complete even a small house may be. 
R EMODELLING of the former George M. Morgan 
residence on Gale’s Point, in Manchester, has given 
a far more conveniently planned interior. The rearrange- 
ment has given four new tiled baths, one large new cham- 
ber, new quartered-oak floors throughout, while electric 
installation and redecoration of the interior are some of 
the changes which have been made for the new owner, 
Jesse Koshland. The improvements were planned by 
Berry & Davidson of Boston, and include alterations to 
make the garage on the place more modern in its equip- 
ment. 
— 
BEACON at ae 
intel rea (bear BEACON STREET 
J. FRED HARVEY AND C. A. WOOD, MANAGING DIRECTORS 
pees BOSTON, MASS. 
EUROPEAN PLAN ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF 
U NDER the new ownership of Louis Behr of Boston, 
the former Winch house on Proctor street, near 
Proctor’s Point, Manchester, is undergoing material 
changes. The house, which is of stone construction for | 
the first story and shingled above, has been enlarged, the 
gambrel roof extended and new piazzas have been built. 
in part covered. A new driveway and retaining walls’ 
and the garage moved to a new location and remodelled 
to make it thoroughly modern, form a part of the plans’ 
which have been carried out. The interior of the house 
has been so altered that the original appearance is almost 
entirely lost. Only the main hall remains as it originally 
was, or nearly so. The living room gained by the changes 
is thirty- -two by twenty feet in size, with a large fire-place 
and special Grueby tiles. The dining room, twenty-five” 
by seventeen feet, has a beamed ceiling and fine fireplace, 
The stairs have been improved and the service part is. 
entirely new and modern. The second floor corridor has 
been extended and there are now on this floor six main 
bedrooms, three baths and a sleeping porch. ‘The third 
floor provides four rooms and a bath for the use of ser-_ 
vants. The house is picturesque in its situation and over- 
looks the harbor interior at Manchester. Berry & David- 
son planned the various changes, which William Galloupe 
carried out. 
C ONTINUATION this season of the development 
of the estate of Gardiner M. Lane, at Manchester, 
makes his place more attractive. ‘The estate, which is in 
the Graves Beach section of Manchester, is called “The 
Chimneys.” Since his formal garden was made, two sea-— 
sons or so ago, Mr. Lane has continued his changes and 
improvements and this season has had planted many. 
fine trees, including junipers and cedars, also shrubbery, 
while terraces have been made and retaining walls built. 
A new greenhouse forms a part of the general plan of im- 
provement, under Olmsted Brothers of Brookline, and car-~ 
ried out by Connolly Brothers of Beverly Farms: 
———— 
O N the estate of Robert Treat Paine, 2d, at Coolidge’s 
Point, a fine gravel tennis court has been built by 
Connolly Brothers of Beverly Farms, and diveways have 
been somewhat improved. 
DR. JAMES W. TOBIN, M. D. V. 
of the Back’ Baw Veterinary Hospital 
will respond promptly to any calls along the North Shore 
during the Summer months. 
Telephone 2200 Back Bay 
