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3 ‘Real estate men Soetioae a very 
‘busy season for the North Shore 
vis year. There is quite a demand 
houses and scores and scores of 
them have been rented. 
—_x— 
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Moore have 
hired the Barlow cottage, owned by 
Arthur Little at Beverly Farms, 
ough the agency of T. Dennie and 
ginald Boardman. Mr. Moore is 
e son of Judge Moore of Pride’s 
ossing and his marriage to Miss 
nna of Cleveland took place last 
—_x— 
— Pereival Lombard has taken the 
Amory Lawrence small house at 
verly Cove for the summer. Last 
ar Mr. Lombard and family oc- 
pied the Winch cottage on Blos- 
m Lane, Manchester. They have 
ed through the agency of T. Den- 
ie and Reginald Boardman. 
—x— 
~ Mrs. Levi Leiter has been rather 
troubled about the reports that have 
en current regarding the new 
summer home she is building for 
he erselt on the Beverly Farms shore. 
She says she is not putting up a 
Biace, as has been suggested, nor 
s she ever paid $50,000 an acre 
r land anywhere, as reported, and 
will be about one-fifth of the 
00,000 which it is credited to cost 
hen finished. 
i > a 
__ Manchester colonists will miss the 
; ussian and Austro-Hungarian em- 
ssies this season, for Baron Rosen 
locate his embassy at Bar Har- 
as will Baron Hegenmuller. 
A nbassador Bryce will change from 
| North East Harbor, Me., to Lenox 
this season. 
—_x— 
The marital troubles of William 
Balfour Ker, the New York artist, 
Whose drawings have quite a vogue 
n Life, is interesting North Shore 
ciety, where Mrs. Ker, who is su- 
if for absolute divorce, spent the 
summer of 1899, at Annisquam, when 
mary Sigsbee, a daughter of Rear- 
imiral Sigsbee of Spanish-Ameri- 
an war fame. The Sigsbee family 
es Beried the Lane cottage at Annis- 
iii. 
ORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MANCHESTER, MASS., MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1910. 
Weer ee ee ae ae ee 
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my 
+ & Suorivty Notes 2 ¢ 
as RE ape Ee 
» Mrs. Quiney A. Shaw, 2nd, return- 
ed to Beverly Farms last Saturday 
from Florida, where she has been so- 
journing much of the winter sea- 
son at Palm Beach, and with her 
aunt, Mrs. Carnegie, at Fernandina. 
Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter 
J. Mitchell are still in Florida. They 
will return the latter part of next 
week. Mr. Mitchell will stop off at 
Washington. Mrs. Mitchell will 
come to Manchester and will be here 
to spend the Easter holidays with 
her son, John, who will be home 
from St. Mark’s. 
—_—x— 
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, 
2nd, are having a new camp built 
in the Adirondacks this winter, and 
are planning to spend much of the 
summer there. They will come to 
their estate in Manchester Cove 
about the middle of next month and 
will go to the Adirondacks in the 
early summer. They will undoubt- 
edly lease their place on the North 
Shore for the summer months. 
—_xX— 
The very sudden death of Thom- 
as Laughlin, multi-millionaire steel 
magnate of Pittsburg, and a broth- 
er-in-law of President Taft, which 
was such a shock to Pittsburg and 
Washington society, recalls the fact 
that Mrs. Laughlin visited the Pres- 
ident’s family at Beverly the past 
summer and has also assisted her 
distinguished sister at the capital 
the past season, where many mem- 
bers of the North Shore summer col- 
onies have renewed their acquaint- 
ance with her. The deceased was a 
son of Major Laughlin of Pittsburg 
and reputed to be worth $20,000,000. 
—_x— 
John Hays Hammond of Glouces- 
ter and Washington, has secured 
the promise of President Taft to be 
the principal speaker at the banquet 
of the League of Republican State 
elubs in Washington, April 9, of 
which Mr, Hammond is chairman. 
—x—- 
K. T. Stotesbury, father of Mrs. 
S. E. Hutchinson of Philadelphia 
and Beverly Farms, will personally 
make good the deficit of the closing 
weeks of grand opera at Hammer- 
stein’s opera house, Philadelphia. 
[EEE EEE SEE FEE 3333333333333, 
¥ # Surivty Notes ¢ 
ee 
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney E. Hutchin- 
son were on from Philadelphia, 
Tuesday, looking over their estate 
at Beverly Farms, where many 
changes are being made this winter, 
including for the most part land im- 
provements. A sea wall is also be- 
ing built and a new stable and gar- 
age, and gardener’s cottage is be- 
ing constructed. 
——k-—-- 
Some 100 Pittsburg women made 
entries for the bench show, which 
opened Wednesday and will con- 
tinue through Saturday in Old City 
hall, Pittsburg. Henry M. Curry 
of the Magnolia colony entered a 
wire-haired fox terrier, and his fi- 
ancee, Miss Elizabeth Heron, a Rus- 
sian wolf hound. The bench com- 
mittee includes John Moorehead, jr., 
and D, O. Dalzell, summer residents 
of the North Shore. It will be the 
biggest show ever held in Pittsburg, 
for many exhibitors are coming 
from Boston, New York, Chicago, 
St. Louis, Cleveland and Cincinnati. 
o—O0 
Mrs. George Lee and daughter, 
Elizabeth, of Beverly Farms are 
among the Bostonians in Bermuda 
this month. They have been occupy- 
ing apartments at the Princess. 
——-NX--- 
A conference on the speciai edu- 
cation of cripples will be held on 
Thursday afternoon, Mar. 31, at 3.15 
o’clock at the Industrial school for 
crippled and deformed children, 241 
St. Botolph street, Boston, at which 
Gov. Eben S. Draper will preside. 
Professor Fritz Lange, a noted Ger- 
man surgeon, will speak on the care 
of cripples in Germany. Brief ad- 
dresses will also be made by Dr. 
Virgil P. Gibney of New York and 
Frederick P. Fish and Dr. E. H. 
Bradford of Boston. Tea will be 
served at 4.30. 
—_x-— 
Miss Helen Hooper of West Man- 
chester, and her chaperone,, Mrs. 
Horton, sailed for Europe this week 
for a few months’ sojourn. During 
their absence Miss Hooper will prob- 
ably select her debutante frocks for 
next winter, when she will come out. 
She celebrated her birthday on Tues- 
day of last week. 
