- 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
“| 
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO COME TO THE STUDIO 
SITTINGS WILL MR. PIERCE MAKES 
BE MADE SITTINGS 
AT ALL OF THE BY APPOINTMENT 
PRINCIPAL AT YOUR 
PLACES ALONG PHOTOGRAPHER RESIDENCE OR 
THE HOTEL 
NORTH SHORE 
729 Boyuston ST, OCRIKOE APARTMENTS 
STUDIO, POST-OFFICE BLOCK, MANCHESTER, MASS. 
TELEPHONE, 146-5 
SS te 
Society Notes 
Samuel W. Bennett is on from the 
West a guest of his sister, Mrs. B. F. 
Yoakum and family at Smith’s Point. 
The family will return the latter part 
of next week to their home in New 
York City. Their horses and stable 
effects was sent on to New York 
Thursday by special train. 
Mr. and Mrs. Louis L. Hopkins 
went over to New York yesterday 
morning and are spending the week- 
end guests of the John R. Heg- 
ermans, on board their large steam 
yacht, in which Mr. Hegerman cruised 
along the North Shore this summer. 
Mr. Hegerman is president of the 
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. 
Thayer McMillan, the crack Yale 
golfer, who has been spending the 
summer at Manchester, has been play- 
ing a remarkably good game this sum- 
met. Last Friday he tied G. H. 
Crocker’s record score of 74 for the 
18 holes. He returns to Yale next 
Monday. 
Mrs. C. A. Munn is leaving Man- 
chester tomorrow for Washington, 
but she will spend some time in New 
York before going to her winter 
home. Miss Carrie L. Munn will 
attend college this year, and both the 
Mr. Munns will attend college this 
year, also. 
George Wigglesworth and family 
are closing their house at Old Neck, 
Manchester, today, and will go to 
their winter home in Milton. 
Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Bement en- 
tertained a few friends with a little 
dinner at the Grill club, Magnolia, 
Sunday evening. Mrs. Louis A. 
Shaw was over from Beverly Farms 
also the first of the week and enter- 
tained at a little dinner party, among 
her guests being Mr. and Mrs. Lester 
Leland. 
The North Shore Grill club closed 
for the season Thursday. Miss 
Stearns, who has seen the club suc- 
cessfully through its first season, will 
spend the fall at the Lenox, in Bos- 
ton, but she expects to sail from New 
York just before the holidays to 
spend the winter in travel. 
Miss McNamara of 665 Loylston 
street, Boston, who is located at 39 
School street, Manchester-by-the- 
Sea, for the season, is prepared to 
do shampooing, marcel waving and 
manicuring. Telephone = connec- 
tion. x 
Unclaimed Letters 
Letters remaining unclaimed at Manches- 
ter Postoffice for week ending Sept.15, 1906: 
C M Amory, Alice G Brown, Miss Margaret 
Beresford, Miss H M Cahill, Rocco Cars- 
saine, Miss Annie F Clark, Willis L Drew, 
Miss Lydia Emmit, Samuel Eliot, W B 
Fay, Mrs Chas Hoyle, W S Hill, Miss Marie 
Higgins, Mrs Hill, Mrs Permelia Ingheim, 
Catelain Domenica, Louis M Johnson, Miss 
Teresa Lavin, Mrs Annie MacDonald, Miss 
Margaret Morrison, Miss Grace McBeth, 
Miss Maggie McGee, Master Joseph Cyril 
McCony, Miss Grunda Olsen, Miss Odine 
Olsen, Jos C Oakes, Mrs William Olmstead, 
Mrs James Oliphant (4), Mrs. John Rice, 
T P W Rogers, Miss J Sullivan, Mrs P Q 
Adam Shaw, Miss Esther Taggart. Wm 
White, Miss Claudis White, A E Wiggin, 
Miss Elizabeth Winsor, Miss M Young. 
SAMUEL L. WHEATON, Postmaster. 
BREEZE subscription $1.00 a year. * 
MAGNOLIA 
FOR SALE: One of the finest summer residences on 
the North Shore. 
50,000 ft. of land and house of sev- 
enteen rooms and four bath rooms and toilet, all mod- 
ern conveniences. 
The grounds are beautifully laid 
out with plenty of shade, ornamental and fruit trees 
and shrubbery, flower garden and tennis court. 
Apply to J. MAY, MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
FOR SALE 
AT VERY 
LOW PRICES 
58 Varieties of Odd Trees and Shrubs 
To clear the ground for Young Stock. 
The block—one-quarter acre—is nearly all Specimen Large Pine, Spruce, 
Hemlock, Maple, Willow, etc. 
Call and see them at the Nursery from 2 to5 p.m. 
(@- We also have the largest stock of specimen trees and shrubs on the North Shore, 
at reasonable prices. 
THe FIERCE NURSERY, BEVERLY FARMS 
HART STREET 
