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VOL. X. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Ambassador and Mrs. Curtis Guild are with Mrs. 
4 Guild’s father, Edward Johnson, at his hoine in Nahant. 
They, with Mrs. Guild’s sister, Mrs. Lavalle and John 
Lavalle, Jr., who came over with them, were among the 
arrivals on the Laconia last week. Myr. Guild will sail 
r from New York tomorrow for his post at St. Petarsburg, 
but Mrs. Guild will be at the Marlboro street, Boston, 
house until November, when she will join the ambas- 
sador at St.Petersburg. 
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Among the many debutantes this season are several 
prominent North Shore girls. Owing to the large num- 
ber of debutantes and the unusual shortness of the sea- 
son, for Easter Sunday is the twenty-third of March 
this year there will be a few social affairs in honor of the 
buds before the summer homes on the Shore are closed 
for the winter months. Miss Rosamond Eliot, the 
youngest daughter of Mrs. Amory Eliot, is to entertain 
with her mother at ‘‘Wildwood,”’ their place at Man- 
_ ehester-by-the-Sea, Saturday afternoon, the 28th of this 
home of her mother, Mrs. Arthur Little. 
month, from four until seven. Mrs. Eliot’s other daugh- 
ters are Mrs. Alfred Codman and Mrs. Richard Lover- 
ing, the latter also of the Manchester colony. Miss 
Rosamond Eliot is a most attractive and accomplished 
girl. She spent part of last year studying abroad. On 
the same date as Miss Eliot’s ‘‘at home,’’ Miss Anne 
Means is to have a dance given her at the Beverly Farms 
Mr. and Mrs. 
Little, Miss Jessie Means, the younger sister of the de- 
butante, and Miss Anne Means have been at Dublin, N. 
_#H., for the summer, but recently arrived at Beverly 
‘alia —— 
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Farms to spend the autumn. Miss Means is a sister 
of Mrs. Andre Nicholas Reggio, one of the June brides 
and one of the number of young married people who 
will be at Beverly yee all Ren this year. 
The date for the marriage of Miss Catherine Foster, 
whose engagement to Robert Meredith Tappan, Harvard 
07, was announced during the earlier part of the sea- 
son, has been set for October. Miss Foster is the oldest 
of the five daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. W. 
Foster of Charles River Valley and Boston, now at 
Marblehead at their attractive home there. The pros- 
pective groom is the son of Mrs. Frederick Tappan of 
Marlboro street, peste. 
Mr. and Mrs. Quincey A. Shaw, Jr., and their young 
son of Pride’s are included among those who are soon 
to close their cottage on the North Shore and take a trip 
abroad. In fact, it will be a trip around the world, 
occupying the greater part of the winter. Mr. and Mrs. 
Shaw were in Egypt pe year. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stackpole of Boston and Na- 
hant are to be at their summer place at Nahant until 
late into the fall this year. They have recently sold 
their Boston home on Beacon street to Mr. and Mrs. E. 
V.R. Thayer, who summer at Lancaster. The Stackpoles 
have as yet made no definite plans for the midwinter. 
Manchester, Mass., 
Friday, September 20, 1912. No. 38 
SOCIETY NOTES 
A number of families along the Shore are effected 
by the death of James H. Beal at Putney, N. H. He 
was a brother of Mrs. John Mason Little, who died at 
Swampscott in June, of Thomas P. Beal of Beverly 
Cove and the Misses Ida and Judith Beal, children of 
the late Mr. and Mrs. James IH. Beal of Nahant. Boyls- 
ton A. Beal of Manchester and William F. Beal of Na- 
hant are half brothers. Although Mr. Beal’s health had 
been poor for a number of years, his death was wholly 
unexpected. Formerly a winter resident of Winchen- 
don, he had made his home for some time at Coneord, 
spending the summer at Putney. 
33 
J. Warren Merrill and family have returned to Man- 
chester-by-the-Sea after a brief holiday at Lenox. The 
Merrills are always among the last of the summer colony 
at Manchester to leave for the city and this year is to 
be no exception to the general rule. Their attractive 
cottage will be open until late into the autumn. 
CO OME O2 
Miss Grace Bireh of Detroit is a guest at Pitch 
Pine Hill, the cottage oceupied this summer by the 
Joseph A. Boyers at Beverly Farms. The Boyers, too, 
are from Detroit and have had many guests from their 
home city with them there this season. They leave very 
shortly for Detroit, making the trip to Buffalo by motor, 
with stop-overs in Albany and Utiea. 
. +4 
‘‘Little Orehard,’’ the summer home of Mr. and 
Mrs. Robert C. Lincoln at Manchester is closed for the 
season. Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln have returned to their 
Beacon street house in Boston. 
o 
Mr. and Mrs. George Seott Winslow of Boston and 
Beverly Farms have as their guest at the Farms, Boyn- 
ton Glidden of New York City. Mr. Glidden is a 
brother of Mrs. Winslow who was Mary Warren Glid- 
den before her marriage. 
o 
Miss Bessie Lee of the Beverly Farms colony is at 
Lake Sunapee, N. H., with Mrs. H. P. MeKean of Pride’s 
Crossing, 
3 
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dorr and their two charming 
daughters, the Misses Katherine and Josephine Dorr, 
coneluded their season at Manchester Monday and re- 
turned to their Boston home. The Misses Dorr have 
been very popular at the Brownlands, where they made 
their home for the summer months. They are both very 
attractive and both are musical. They have taken great 
interest in the out-of-door life at the sea-shore and 
have entered into all sports and social affairs with 
enthusiasm. 
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Miss Marie Van Vorst, after a visit at the Morawetz 
cottage at Beverly Fams is now visiting at Paul Smiths 
in the Adirondacks. Miss Van Vorst, a young New 
York woman, who has been quite popular during her 
stay on the North Shore, is an author of some repute. 
