Sept. 3, 1915. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE und Reminder 25 
Fresh Laid Fancy Breakfast Eggs and the best quality 
Butter in Prints, Boxes or Tubs 
Unsalted Butter 
Lightly Salted Butter 
Having Supplied Family Trade for past seventy-eight years, 
we know what is wanted and can furnish the quality 
W. H. LERNED & SONS 
Established 1837 
BUTTER, CHEESE, EGGS, 
COFFEE 
37-39 FANEUIL HALL MARKET, BOSTON 
Telephones: 1431 and 1432 Richmond 
EXPRESS GHARGES PREPAID 
We solicit your orders, delivered as wanted 
are more fountain-like and smaller affairs. The terraced 
garden surrounded by the stone walls with the pretty pond 
nearby is another of the many attractive gardens in Ham- 
itton, This one is at “Homewood,” the beautiful sum- 
mer home of Mr. and Mrs. Rodolphe L. Agassiz of Bos- 
ton. The flowers are very bright just now, but the little 
pond near the garden surrounded by the thick pines and 
other trees seems to be the most idyllic spot imaginable. 
PSWICH summer residents are planning for their us- 
ual long and pleasant autumn on their country estates 
which are now looking especially well with the late sum- 
mer flowers coming on and the many fruit trees bending 
with their abundant crops. 
Hon. and Mrs. Charles A. Campbell of “Fairview,” 
County road, Ipswich, have with them this week their 
Gaughter’s family, Judge and Mrs. Albert D. Bosson and 
George Winslow Campbell of Boston and Mrs. Fred W. 
Hatch of Reading. “Fairview” is one of the many at- 
tractive places on the County road and has been owned 
by the Campbells for twelve years. Previous to that they 
lived for séven years on the opposite side of the road 
where the Geo. E. Barnards are now living. The large 
brown-shingled modern house of the Campbells stands on 
high rolling ground and is surrounded by prettily laid 
out lawns and gardens. The terrace on which the house 
is built has long beds of old-fashioned flowers and hot- 
house plants in groups edging it. An immense bed of 
white hydrangeas is very conspicuous just now near the 
sun-parlor of the house. The large garden in the rear is 
showing a fine collection of fall flowers and the rose- 
garden is still bearing a few late roses. The roses are 
mostly of a rare kind from Hesson, Germany, and are 
very beautiful. A quaint tea house made of bark forms 
a cosy retreat in the garden and is perched high up on a 
rocky knoll. It is a very artistic affair and is in more of 
the nature of a den than a mere tea-house. Large apple 
orchards and wooded pastures give a countrified air fo 
this pretty place which is much enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs. 
Campbell as their year-round home. 
Miss Corinna Searle of Ipswich daughter of Mr. 
and Mrs. Charles P. Searle, left last Friday for a visit 
at Bretton Woods, in the White mountains. Her guest, 
Miss Katherine Thaw of New York, has returned to 
her home. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Crane, Jr., of Castle Hill, 
Ipswich, gave a clam-bake on their place last Wednesday. 
The guests included the entire Argilla road colony num- 
bering over a dozen families who live near Castle Hu, 
and others along the road. It was a very enjoyable affair 
and the beach at Castle Hill is an ideal place for such a 
large gathering. Mr. and Mrs. Crane had returned froma 
a short visit in Chicago just before the affair and have 
left Wednesday for California and the Expositions. 
Miss Betty DuBlois, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Geo. L. DuBlois of Ipswich has returned from a trip to 
Center Harbor. 
Mr. and Mrs. Horace C. Davis of Brookline and 
Argilla road, Ipswich, gave a birthday party, Tuesday, 
for their son. The Davis family are spending their first 
summer in Ipswich in the Jenkins cottage. 
Mistand @Mars)CharlesoG = Dyer of = [he Bushes” 
Ipswich, entertained at dinner last Friday evening. Their 
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Kenyon of Labor- 
in-vain road, Mr. and Mrs. ‘Frank H. Richardson of 
“Meadow View” and Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Bourne of 
Boston and Ipswich. 
Mrs. John Heard and daughter, Miss Elsie Heard 
of So. Main st., Ipswich, gave a dinner party at their 
home last Thursday, 
“Cottonfield,” the quaint old brick house in Ipswich, 
situated in view of Ipswich river, is one of the interesting 
old places of the town. Large oaks and pines surround 
the house from the brick terrace of which the view 
down to the river is one of the prettiest on the place. It 
belongs to Rev. and Mrs. Roland Cotton Smith of Wash- 
ington, who are in California this season and has been 
occupied all summer by Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Reece 
of Boston. 
Ye Burnham House, Ipswich, has a great many 
antiques which it is offering for sale at very reasonable 
prices just now. These rare old pieces add much to the at- 
tractiveness of the place and hundreds of visitors each 
week find their way to this old house and tea-room. Mr. 
Purnhatn’s antiques are also on sale at Y* Rogers Manse 
ini Ipswich village and at The Sign of the Crane tea-room 
in Manchester. If one wishes to know where the young 
people from the Oceanside motor to for their tea and 
lunches all that is necessary is to glance at the register 
with the inscription above it, “Sign y® the Book” at Y° 
Burnham House. Among the many names this week 
were noted the Misses Doris Bryan, Ethel Morse, Char- 
lctte Fahnestock, Jean and Helen Middleton. and the 
Messrs. Chester Lockwood, Charles DeLong, John Cars- 
callen, 2d, Philip Bryan, William Shaw, Porter G, Fisher, 
John B. Callery and Cyrus Miller of the Oceanside. 
Large parties from Rye Beach, Baltimore and Lowell 
have been over, Miss Eugenia Meigs was in a Lowell 
party. .Mirsa kK. F. Greeley of the Brownlands, Manches- 
ter, gave a dinner for eight. From Eastern Point have 
come Mr. and Mrs, Henry A. Raymond, D. E. Stowe, 
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Williams and Miss Jervis, guests of 
Mrs S. A. Raymond of “The Ramparts” and Cleveland, 
Ohio. 
