VOL. X. 
ie 
: 
ss SOCIETY NOTES 
_ Mrs. Robert C. Winthrop and her 
daughter, Miss Clara Winthrop, closed 
‘their West Manchester cottage for a 
long period and sailed Thursday week 
on the Kronprinzessin Cecillie from 
New York for Europe, where a great 
part of the time will be spent in Paris 
as the guests of Mrs. J. Grant Forbes, 
formerly Miss Margaret Winthrop. 
4 o28 90 
Miss Leslie Bradley, daughter of 
‘Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Bradley of 
Boston and Pride’s Crossing, will be 
married to Roger Cutler Saturday, 
Dec. 13, at the Boston home of the 
Bradleys. Miss Bradley, one of the 
most sought after girls on the North 
Shore, is as charming as she is pretty 
and society is looking forward to her 
_ wedding with more than usual interest. 
A dance ‘hich W ep hivaion Society 
circles are anticipating with pleasure, 
is that the last night of the year, which 
Mrs. George Von L,. Meyer will give 
- at her home gs for the younger set. 
The William H. Coolidges are keep- 
ing their house at Magnolia open 
practically all winter. They are 
_ among an increasing number of “sum- 
mer cottagers’” who are becoming 
winter cottagers by coming to the 
_ Shore for the week-ends. They come 
_down every Friday and remain until 
Monday. The Coolidge estate at the 
_ junction of Raymond and Summer 
streets in the Magnolia. section of 
_ Manchester, is getting to be one of 
the most attractive places in that. sec- 
tion of the Shore. 
929 
The Oliver Ames. family. will re- 
main at their country place at. North 
Easton until after Thanksgiving, when 
they will open their Boston: residence. 
Miss Olivia Ames is to be presente] 
at the first December ball at the Cop- 
ley-Plaza. 
oR SO 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Mason 
are giving a ball for Miss: Miriam Ma- 
son, a sister of Mr. Mason, on Dec. 
10. at Hotel Somerset, Boston. Miss 
Mason is. one of the debutantes of the 
winter, a daughter of the late Mr. and 
Mrs. Mortimer B. Mason of Man- 
chester. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, November 15, 1912. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
With only relatives present, and. in 
as simple a manner as possible, Mary 
Lovering (Head) Russell, widow of 
William A. Russell, was married on 
Thursday of last week, at St. John’s 
Episcopal church, Beverly Farms, to 
Henry Cannon Clark of New York. 
Their engagement was announced the 
latter part of September. The officia- 
ting clergyman was Rev. Edward D. 
Tibbets, D.D., of Hoosac, N. Y., as- 
sisted by Rev. Albert E. George of 
Boston, the acting rector of St. John’s 
at Beverly Farms. The bride was 
unattended. Following the ceremony 
the few present went to the residence 
of the bride, a new house of colonial 
type situated on the Wenham road 
at the Farms, where a wedding break- 
fast was served. It was a family 
gathering without any guests. Mrs. 
Clark is a daughter of the late Mr. 
and Mrs. Charles Head, whose sum- 
mer home was “Headlands,” at Ms 1- 
chester. She is a sister of Mrs. 
Philip Stockton of “Highcliff,” Man- 
chester. Mr. Clark is a Harvard ’11 
man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis 
Crawford Clark af New York. 
O80 
Mrs. William F. Draper and her 
daughter, Miss Margaret Draper, will 
close their house in Washington early 
in January and sail for Egypt, where 
they will pass the remainder of the 
winter. Before going abroad Mrs. 
Draper will give a fancy dress ball 
on Dec. 26 at her Washington home, 
according to a custom which she has 
followed for several years. Mrs. 
Draper’s Christmas balls are a leading 
feature of the Washington season and 
are always looked forward to by the 
younger element of society at the cap- 
ital. They will spend next summer at 
Manchester as usual. 
% O 
All arrangements have been com- 
pleted for the Vincent Club fair to be 
given at the Copley-Plaza, Nov. 26. 
The patronesses include many matrons 
who are prominent in North Shore 
Society circles. In the list are Mrs. 
Bryce J. Allan, Mrs. Oliver Ames, 
Mrs. Augustus Hemenway, Mrs. Wil- 
liam Hooper, Mrs. Henry L. Higgins- 
son, Mrs. Neal Rantoul, Mrs. Philip 
L. Saltonstall. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
No. 46. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Prince Gennaro Caracciolo of 
Naples has summed up his impres- 
sions of the American woman “as a 
dazzling complexity of charming man- 
ners, kindness and French liveliness; 
full of spirit, cheerfulness in conver- 
sation, Spanish in temperament and 
Parisian in modishness, and with an 
almost cosmopolitan simplicity, which, 
however, is sometimes marred by an 
exaggerated conventionalism.” The 
Prince, who has been spending the 
past three months at Newport, has 
many friends among the North Shore 
contingent. He was the guest of 
Mrs. Francis S. Watson at the 
luncheon recently given by Mrs. Hora- 
tio N. Slater for Mrs. Curtis Guild at 
Pine Bank, Readville. 
- O89 
Miss Anne Means of the Beverly 
Farms colony was one of the pourers 
at the tea which Mrs. Charles Wells 
Hubbard gave this week to present her 
daughter, Miss Elizabeth Hubbard. 
Miss Means is to be hostess at a tea 
next Wednesday, which Mrs. Arthur 
Little, her mother, is giving for her at 
her Boston home. There will be danc- 
ing. 
O38 > 
The Harrison K. Caners are among 
the late dwellers on the Shore this 
autumn. ‘They closed their place at 
Manchester last Saturday and have 
returned to their 1707 Walnut St., 
Philadelphia, residence. 
3% 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis L. Higginson, 
Jr., motored down from Boston Sun- 
day and were entertained at luncheon 
by Mrs. William Hooper at her home 
at West Manchester. 
O20 
Miss Eleanor Fabyan was one of 
the debutantes who were invited to 
assist at the tea which Mrs. Henry G. 
Lord of Brookline gave for her 
daughter, Miss Mary Lord, yesterday. 
ueXkqe,t ssi Ucousajye owes oy], 
Servet ted vat <the:! “at home,” 
which Mrs. George Lee of Brookline 
and Beverly Farms gave for her 
daughter, Miss Marjory Lee. Others 
on the list were Miss Anne Means of 
Beverly Farms, Miss Josephine Ran- 
toul of Beverly Farms and Miss 
Olivia Ames of Prides Crossing. 
