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HERE is great demand for cottages along the North 
Shore this year according to reports from the real 
' estate office of T. Dennie Boardman, and Reginald and 
Richard deB. Boardman of Boston and Manchester, and 
Jonathan May of Magnolia. Among some of the rentals 
reported are the following: 
OR 9 
Mrs. Preston Gibson of Washington will spend the 
summer at the Wilkins (Pump) cottage, Beverly Farms. 
Oo 8 OS 
The John R. McGinleys of Pittsburgh, who have not 
been on the North Shore for several years, are to have 
the Howard residence at West Manchester this year. 
o& # 0. 
J. W. Tewksbury and family of Longwood are to 
return to Beverly Farms this summer, and will again oc- 
cupy the Owl Cottage on Hemlock street. 
o 8.9 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Russell of Boston are to 
occupy the George Dexter house at Pride’s Crossing, 
this summer. Mr. Russell’s mother of North Andover 
is to occupy the Frank B. Bemis house at Beverly Farms 
- this season. 
o % 
Nelson S. Bartlett has arrived at his estate on Smith’s 
Point, Manchester, for the summer. 
The Philip Pee ions are aerii at their residence in 
Manchester after spending the winter in Boston. 
Or 3.1 
_ Miss Mary Proctor is at her cottage on Sea street, 
Manchester, for the spring. Miss Proctor has leased for 
a period of three years the cottage which the Russell 
Tysons had for so many years to Frederick M. Burnham, 
who is to marry Miss Rosamond Eliot on May 2oth. 
The young people will make their year-round home in 
Manchester. Miss Proctor has rented her other cottage 
to a Boston architect. en 
The news of the death of Meredyth Whitehouse, at 
Walkins, N. Y., Monday, came as a great shock to North 
Shore people, especially at Manchester where the family 
make their home most of the year. He was the only 
son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Whitehouse (Mary 
Armour), formerly of Chicago. His body was found 
at the foot of a great cliff, not far from a hotel where he 
was stopping. We are at a loss to publish any of the 
details of the affair. Funeral services were held yes- 
terday at the Grace Sete New York city. 
3% O° 
Mr. and Mrs. John Chess Ellsworth of South Bend, 
Ind., will open “Wayside,” their Manchester Cove home, 
the middle of May. Mrs. Ellsworth’s mother, Mrs. J. L. 
Chalifoux of Lowell with her son-in-law and daughter, 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Stevens, will, as usual, occupy 
a cottage on the North Shore, but have not yet deter- 
mined where. 
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Yi. 
HE MARRIAGE in the Arlington st. church, Boston, 
last Saturday afternoon of Miss Dorothy Morgan and 
Paul Graham Courtney, was of interest to North Shore 
folk, as the Morgans were formerly of the Manchester 
colony and Miss Morgan’s brother, Lawrence W. Morgan, 
who married Miss Esther Parkman Turner, is of the 
year-round colony at Beverly Farms. The bride is the 
daughter of Geo. M. Morgan of 260 Clarendon st., Boston. 
Mr. Courtney is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph W. 
Courtney of Marlboro st., Boston. The Rev. Dr. Paul 
Revere Frothingham was the officiating clergyman. The 
church decorations were simple, consisting of palms in 
the chancel and bridal roses in a setting of greenery at 
the back of the high pulpit. The bride wore a wedding 
gown of white satin, made with a long train and trimmed 
with tulle and rich lace. Her tulle veil was caught in the 
coiffure with orange blossoms, and she carried a bouquet 
of lilies of the valley. Miss Miriam Mason, debutante of 
1915 and the fiancee of Walter H. Trumbull, Jr., was the 
maid of honor. She wore a gown of pink tulle over pink 
taffeta, and a hat of gray straw trimmed with pink ostrich 
plumes. Instead of flowers she carried a parasol of pink 
silk. There were two bridesmaids, Miss Alice Thorn- 
dike and Miss Elizabeth De Ford. Their gowns and 
hats were like Miss Mason’s. Miss Suzette Courtney, a 
sister of the bridegroom, was flower girl. Mr. and Mrs. 
Courtney will live in Wellesley. 
DENS RO. 
Miss Phyllis Sears was at Pride’s Crossing over the 
last week-end, a guest of her sister, Mrs. Bayard Warren, 
and Mr. Warren. The engagement of Miss Sears and 
Bayard Tuckerman, Jr., the first of last week, was of no 
great surprise, as it was generally understood among their 
close associates that the engagement was to be announced 
when Miss Sears’ father returned from his cruise to the 
West Indies. It is understood the wedding will be at 
St. John’s church, Beverly Farms, followed by a large 
reception at the Sears’ summer home in Pride’s Crossing. 
It is likely that Saturday, July 1, will be selected for the 
day of the wedding. 
o 8 O 
T. Jefferson Newbold of New York, the former a 
grandson of Hon. T. Jefferson Coolidge of Manchester, 
is to occupy “Alhambra,” one of the houses belonging to : 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Harris, off Masconomo st., this 
season. 
OR 59 
Norton Wigglesworth and family of Milton have 
leased the Rotch cottage on Blossom Lane, Manchester, 
for the summer. . 
Ot36. +0 
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Meeker of Chicago, who have 
hired a house at Beverly Farms for the summer, are no 
strangers to the North Shore. They summered at Bev- 
erly Farms and Pride’s Crossing for several years, and 
last year they were at Marblehead.’ | 
