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Go enjoyable has been the early September weather that 
Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, the British ambassador, who 
has the Mason cottage at Beverly Cove, plans to spend 
the month on the shore, and may extend his stay into 
October. Count Macchi di Cellere, the Italian ambas- 
Sior who is at Pitch Pine ‘hall, the Luke cottage at 
severly Harms, will also be here through September and 
will probably extend his sojourn througa the Indian sum- 
mer, the ideal time of the year for many of the colonists. 
Some of the attaches of the two embassies will return 
sto Washington the latter part of the month to have 
things in readiness for the transfer from Beverly to the 
capital city. 
C223 BS 
Quincy A. Shaw, 2d, has shipped his horses and 
string of polo ponies, from Beverly Far*s to his farm 
at Greenwood, Va.! Mrs. Shaw and children will not 
eo south yet but will be with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
Walter Mitchell at Manchester until the hot weather ‘s 
over, when she will join Mr. Shaw. 
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Ammi Wright Lancashire, son of Dr. and Mrs. J. 
H. Lancashire, of Manchester, sailed Tuesday from New 
York on the Steamer Ryndam, for Europe. He is ac- 
companying EH. Alexander Powell, special war corres- 
pondent for the New York |Vorld, and they will journey 
turough France and Belgium. Mr. Lancashire will act 
-s photographer in co-operation with Mr. Powell’s work 
as a writer. Dr. and Mrs. Lancashire and their daugh- 
ters went on from the North Shore to see Mr. Lan- 
cushiré’ sail. They will return almost immediately to 
Manchester and will keep their summer home here, form- 
erly the Charles Head estate, open until the first of Nov- 
erber. The winter season will be divided between New 
‘York and Florida. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Munn, Jr., are concluding 
their summer’s stay at Manchester, with the former’s 
nother, today, and they are going to Newport for a visit 
with the Wideners before returning to Radnor, Pa. Mrs. 
Munn;.Jr’s., brother Drexel Paul, who has been with 
them at Manchester the past fortnight during the polo 
matches at rlamilton, left Tuesday. Mr. Munn and Mr. 
Paul and another friend, Thomas Blumer of Providence 
and Boston figured in a rescue from a burning yacht 
last Friday evening. They were at Singing Beach when 
they noticed flames shooting up from an Italian fisher- 
man’s boat off Coolidge’s Point. They succeeded in get- 
ting the life-boat through the surf at Singing Beach and 
rowed toward the burning boat, and assisted in towing it 
to the little beach on Kettle Island, off Magnolia. 
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Mr. Rufus F. Greeley and daughter, Miss Marion 
sreeley are concluding their season’s stay at the Brown- 
lands, Manchester, next Monday. Their winter home 
is at Hotel Victoria, Boston. 
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RALTLING good polo, one of the best matched of the 
Myopia tournament, featured the play in the finals 
for the Samuel D. Warren memorial cups, when 
Devon, Pa., Country Club won from Dedham Monday 
afternoon on the Myopia field at Hamilton by a score 
of 14 to 11.. Devon has been playing in good form all 
through the tournament and was in top condition Mon- 
day, its shift in lineup since its opening game proving 
effective. Devon had a twelve goal team, with Harry 
Tweed of New York the high handicap man, five goals, 
when Dedham had a nine goal outfit headed by “Bobbie” 
Shaw, a former Myopia star. With a three goal allow- 
ar:ce to wipe up Devon started the match with a rush and 
in the first period cut off two of this handicap. In the 
second period it was all Dedham, however, but in the 
third the Devon team hit its stride and made five goals, 
one after the other on sensational riding and accurate 
driving. - Play was even in the fourth and fifth, each 
team scoring a goal. In the seventh Devon added two 
more to its total, but in the seventh Dedham scored twice 
‘o Devon’s once and. the Pennsylvania tear had a one 
goal lead. In the final period Devon’s team work was 
saown when several times it recovered the basswood near 
the goal post and carried it to the other end of the field, 
two goals being made by the Devon men and it gave 
them the victory and the cups by a three-goal margin. 
$29 
Following a long visit at the Manchester hove 
“Sunnybank,” of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ivins Croll, Miss 
“:dney B. Morison of Baltimore has gone to Narragan- 
sett Pier. Miss Pauline Croll left Manchester Monday 
{9 visit Miss Marion Stevens at Attica, N. Y. 
S295. 
“iss ‘Clara ‘Winthrop of West Manchester told of 
her experiences in the French war hospitals at the meet- 
le sO1ethe Lnorndike Club held at the Board of Trade 
rooms in the Mason Building, Beverly, Tuesday evening. 
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Mr. and Mrs. John Borden (Ellen W. Waller) are 
on from Chicago for their customary late summer visit 
with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Breckin- 
riige Waller, Coolidge’s Point, Manchester. They are 
leaving next Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Waller will remain 
on the shore until October. 
SO eS Ke? 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whitman Means (Alice F. 
Hubbard) are receiving congratulations on the arrival 
of a baby girl in their year-round hove at Beverly 
Farms Monday,—the second daughter to enlarge this 
happly family circle. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hay (Alice Appleton) of 
Washington and Appleton Farms, Ipswich, are receiving 
congratulations upon the birth of a son two weeks ago at 
tneir summer home, the “Cottage” on the Appleton Faris. 
Mr. Hay is the only surviving son of tne late John Hay. 
