NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
AND REMINDER 
Vol. XIV 
HE Wiper Spread MoveMENT to recruit young Ameri- 
can women and men to assist in distributing hospital 
supplies for the French wounded is being enthusiastically 
seconded by sponsors of the War Shop in Chicago. Mrs. 
Russell Tyson is sending her niece, Miss Amy Bradley, 
to France next month to play good Samaritan under Miss 
Elizabeth Perkins, the field secretary of the fund for 
French wounded. Miss Bradley is recruiting other 
friends to join her mission. 
The North Shore has many young people who have 
been enthusiasts in the work-rooms of the past summer, 
where great quantities of surgical supplies have been 
turned out. Among these young workers who have 
helped in many ways are some who will, no doubt, gladly 
give their time to this important work in France. In 
all of the work-rooms scattered along the Shore were 
seen the young folk, and in some the tiny children were 
painstakingly working at some light task,—all for the 
“poor soldiers.” 
Miss Helen Frick is one of the practical young girls 
of the Shore. During the past summer at “Eagle Rock,” 
Pride’s Crossing, she has had a cooking class along lines 
of household economics, conducted in the lodge on the 
Frick estate. This was attended by the friends of Miss 
Frick in her immediate neighborhood. She has also been 
working industriously in war relief work, in which she 
was aided by the maids of the household and others in 
making surgical dressings. The young girls from the 
vacation house, “The House of the Iron Railing,” over 
in Wenham, have frequently found their way over to the 
Pride’s Crossing home to the work-shop of Miss Frick, 
which is located in the attractive lodge. These girls 
from Miss Frick’s vacation house always make an inter- 
esting group when seen strolling along the road attired 
in their pretty middy blouses. 
rod 
Mrs. Frank Hearne of Kansas City, who has spent 
the summer at Narragansett Pier, has ‘been upon the 
Shore visiting. She is the sister-in-law of Mrs. Charles 
Webster Littlefield of Manchester. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, September 29, 1916 
No. 39 
MANCHESTER will have an opportunity to hear Miss 
Gladwin, the most famous of American Red Cross 
nurses, who has been called the second Florence Nightin- 
gale. Miss Gladwin, who had some thrilling experiences 
with the American Red Cross in Serbia battling with the 
typhus epidemic, will speak in the Manchester Town hall, 
Wednesday, October 4, at 8 o’clock. Miss Gladwin is an 
eloquent speaker, fully able to describe the stirring scenes 
she witnessed in Europe. At one time the hospital in 
which she was serving was in the range of the artillery 
fire of the Austrian forces. 
Miss Gladwin’s coming to Manchester will open the 
two weeks’ campaign in Essex County to bring up the 
membership of the Red Cross on a par with that of other 
countries. ‘The local campaign is a part of a four weeks’ 
national campaign. Miss Gladwin’s lecture will be free. 
The Manchester committee includes Mrs. E. Lau- 
rence White of Beverly Farms and Mrs. C. E. Cotting, 
Mrs. J. Warren Merrill and F. J. Merrill of Manchester. 
Ad 
Oo 8 6 
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Codman, who occupied their 
Hamilton place this summer after an absence of a year 
while Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Sargent (Margery Lee) were 
on their estate, have taken a house for the winter at 
Lenox. “ 
Go 8 9 
Mrs. Chas. A. Munn prolonged her stay in the White 
Mountains until the middle of this week, when she re- 
turned to Manchester. She motored through the Green 
Mountains to Montreal, and stopped at the Mount Wash- 
ington, Bretton Woods, on the way home. 
oO 3 OO 
W. H. Wellington of Beverly Cove has just returned 
from a ten-day motor trip to the White Mountains, being 
registered at the Mount Washington, Bretton Woods. 
cAZ 
ve 
Mr. and Mrs. Fitz Eugene Dixon of Philadelphia, 
have concluded their stay on the North Shore, where they 
have been occupying the Ahl cottage at Pride’s Crossing. 
They will spend most of October at Newport, guests of 
Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Rice. 
| 
is still complete. 
LEXINGTON ROW — : 
FURING the next two weeks North Shore people will 
~ have an opportunity of going over our exclusive collec- 
tion of articles suitable for Christmas or other gifts. Stock 
Articles selected now may be delivered at 
once or held for future delivery. 
OVINGTON’S 
E. OVINGTON PARKER, RESIDENT MANAGER 
Store closes October 7.’ 
TEL. 496 
MAGNOLIA 
