6 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Sept. 15, 1916, 
Ready for the Polo Match at Myopia 
of the most charming musicales of the season when 
they introduced their musical friends to their North Shore 
friends. Dinners, dances and week-end parties have been 
on the social calendar of many. Among the prominent 
entertainers have been the A. C. Burrages, who have just 
announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Eliza- 
beth Burrage, to Harold Chalifoux. Y Vacht parties have 
ben almost weekly occasions from their beautiful home 
on Smith’s Point, Manchester. The Walter D. Denégres, 
Lester Lelands, Charles M. Amorys, Mrs. Preston Gib- 
son, Mrs. R. S. Reynolds Hitt, Mrs. John Markle, Mrs. 
John W. Blodgett and Mrs. W. Harry Brown have been 
among others who entertained extensively. Amos A. 
Lawrence of Beaver Pond, Beverly, gave his beautiful 
estate for the Navy Festival, one of the stellar events of 
the summer. The Beverly Farms church fair on the 
grounds of “The Rectory” was the usual fashionable as- 
semblage of the summer parishioners who so generously 
gave their aid to the cause. 
And then it has been a season of philanthropies. The 
Red Cross and other Surgical Dressings workrooms on 
the Shore have turned out an enormous amount of work. 
Prominently identified with these have been Miss Louisa 
P. Loring, Mrs. Boylston A. Beal, Mrs. Gardiner M. 
Lane, Mrs. Russell Codman, Mrs. M. G. Haughton, Miss 
Harriet Rantoul, Mrs. Robert S. Bradley, Mrs. Lester 
Leland, Mrs. Henry S. Grew, 2d, Mrs. George Lyman, 
Miss. Alice Thorndike, Mrs. William H. Coolidge, Mrs. 
E. M. Binney, Mrs. George F. Willett, Mrs, E. B. Rich- 
ardson, Mrs. Phillip Dexter and Mrs. F. L. Higginson. 
Bridge parties of a benevolent nature have “been held 
at the North Shore Swimming Pool and at the home of 
Mrs. Robert S. Bradley. The usual tennis and golf 
tournaments have taken place, and the season has closed 
with two events of special prominence: the amateur dog 
show at the Essex County club in Manchester, and the 
head-dress ball at the Oceanside, Magnolia, of which Mrs. 
John Hays Hammond was the inspiration. This was a 
gloriously big night in every way and fittingly represented 
the great work for which the Woman’s American Supply 
League stands. Mrs. Hamomnd is its faithful president 
and chief organizer in New York, in which she has been 
assisted by Miss Helen Clay Frick and other prominent 
New Yorkers. The ball was in aid of the campaign 
against infantile paralysis. 
And now to Hamilton, Wenham, Topsfield and Ip- 
swich! A few rare treats socially were enjoyed over 
there in the summer season, although to many that fine 
pastoral region spells autumn with its glory of colored 
leaves, ripened fruit, frosty, bracing air and the hunts. 
The large estates with their colonial homesteads or 
Georgian mansions; the meadows and fine stretches of 
Myopia Scene—A ball goes aver the boards into the crowd 
