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April 21, 1916. 
when she proved one of the strongest of the players at 
Hillsborough. She wore a natty polo costume of khaki 
and was scarcely distinguished from her male companions 
while giving the exhibition of horsemanship for which 
So accurately did she shoot her goals that 
she made five of the fifteen scored and rode oft her op- 
ponents with as much cleverness as any of the men. 
In just about nine cases out of ten it is the pretty 
foot that is stamped in anger. 
EW YORK society has been interested in the Lenten 
lectures given at the Colony Club and elsewhere in the 
city. Mme. Chenu of Paris has been giving a series this 
spring at the Colony Club and recently gave one at the 
Ritz-Carlton for which Miss Anne Morgan was a pat- 
The handsome new building into which the 
Colony Club moved this winter is considered the most 
modern and luxurious of any club for women in the 
Miss Ruth Morgan was recently elected presi- 
dent of the club. 
o 8 OO 
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Moore (Fannie Hanna), some of 
the McCormicks and the Morse Elys of Chicago are visit- 
ing some of the Hanna connections at Thomasville, Ga. 
The Leonard Hannas, who have been at Palm Beach, 
are visiting Melville Hanna. On Easter Sunday Mrs. 
Robert Livingston Ireland (Kate Hanna, of Cleveland) 
will give her annual egg rolling at Pebble Hill plantation. 
The guests will include plantation neighbors and the large 
Hanna contingent who are in the south. It is really the 
closing event of the Thomasville season and is a very 
unique entertainment, the colored people on all of the 
neighboring plantations being invited. 
o 3 ~°9 
Mrs. Howard Cushing, Miss Edith Deacon and Mrs. 
Harry Payne Whitney will be among those who pose in 
the tableaux of Venetian paintings, held at the home of 
Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt, next Tuesday, in aid of war 
sufferers in Venice. Francis Crowninshield is on the 
committee of arrangement. Each tableau will have 
sponsor, who will defray all its expenses, and tickets, it 
13 said, will sell for $25 each. 
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Peers: 
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Miss Katherine Thaw will be the maid of honor at 
the wedding of her sister, Miss Barbara Thaw, to Lieut. 
Scott B. Macfarlane, U. S. N., April 28, at the Church 
of Heavenly Rest. A reception will follow at the Cosmo- 
politan club. The Misses Thaw are the daughters of Mr. 
and Mrs. Alexander Blair. 
SoD 
The Marquise de San Marzano will give a luncheon 
at her home Saturday for Miss Elizabeth Wood, daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Wise Wood, whose wedding 
to John Cyrus Distler oe 20. 
The Marblehead Neck colony is interested in the 
wedding on April 29 of Miss Ellen Coleman du Pont, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. Coleman du Pont of New 
York and Wilmington, Del., to Holliday Stone Meeds, Jr., 
of Wilmington. The wedding will be in Trinity Church. 
The engagement was seuouuced in January. 
The North Shore will be interested in the summer 
term at Miss Spence’s school where the girls in the ad- 
vanced classes are preparing to take a five weeks’ course 
in first aid to the injured and practical hospital work. 
Many of the students are from homes along the Shore, 
and the older ones will no doubt take advantage of the 
course in June, 
-respond to the call of the country for defense. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 7 
Cobh, Hates & Yeorxa Co. 
Salem, Massachusetts 
We announce the 
Opening of Our New Store 
In the Masonic Temple Building 
3 Washington and Lynde Sts. 
In addition to our Complete Stock of Imported and 
Domestic Groceries, Confectionery, Fruit, Vegetables, 
Bakery and Delicatessen, we have added a Modern: Meat 
and Fish Market carrying Fresh Meat, Poultry and Game 
in season, and choicest varieties of Fresh Fish to be 
found in the Eastern Market. 
All goods delivered, by our own men, at all the shore 
resorts from Swampscott to Manchester, and by Freight, 
Express or Parcel Post anywhere in New England. 
John Hays Hammond, Jr., the brilliant son of a dis- 
tinguished father, is the first of American inventors to 
He has 
invented, the Board of Ordnance has tested and approved, 
and Congress is about to appropriate money to purchase 
the radio-dynamic torpedo, which can be guided by wire- 
less telegraphy from shore, ship or aeroplane, and carries 
a ton of explosives on or under the water. It. can be 
operated by one man with an efficient radius of twenty- 
eight miles. When our coasts are equipped with this 
invention, at stations selected by Army experts, we shall 
be impregnable to any attack by battleships. Inventor 
Hammond graduated from Yale six years ago; was born 
at San Francisco in 1888; began inventions of practical 
and scientific value when only seventeen years old, and 
now promises to revolutionize coast-defense and naval 
warfare. Next! (From Town Topics.) 
Collector: Did you look at that little bill I left yes- 
terday, sir? 
House Member: Yes; it has passed the first read- 
ing.—Boston Transcript. 
ASHINGTON 
Mrs. James McMillan has been entertaining Baroness 
von Ketteler, who was Miss Ledyard of Detroit, and 
who married the German diplomatist before he was made 
Minister to China, where he met a tragic death at the 
beginning of the Boxer rebellion. The Baroness lived 
in Berlin a while, but since the war has been on this 
side at her old home. 
o 4% 9 
Mrs. Ernest W. Roberts was at the tea given by 
Mrs. Burnett Mitchell Chiperfield, which was one of the 
prettiest of the spring season, 
