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OTTAGE RENTALS along the North Shore are be- 
ing made in larger numbers than ever, say real estate 
men. ‘The prospects of a “big” season are apparent, if 
the demand for houses and estates avail anything. In 
fact about all of the larger estates are taken for the 
- summer. 
o 8 
John N. Stevens and family of Brookline, who had 
the Ford cottage in Magnolia village last season; has 
leased the Furman-Channing cottage at Manchester Cove 
for this summer, the rental being made through the Board- 
man agency of Boston and Manchester. 
o 8 9 
The Robert L. Livingstons of New York are to oc- 
cupy the Brinley cottage at Magnolia this season. 
o 82 ¢O 
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob C. R. Peabody (Florence D. 
Wheatland) of “The Lindens,’ Danvers, are to occupy 
the Vandervelt cottage on West street, Beverly Farms, 
very soon. This will be their first summer in this cottage. 
Oo 8 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick I. Emery (Dorothy W. 
Pierce) of 19 Willard Rord, Brookline, are to occupy the 
Hardy cottage, corner of Hale and Valley streets, Bever- 
ly Farms, this season. 
: OLS TO 
Mrs. Rebecca M. Colfelt of Philadelphia, who has 
been spending her winters in Magnolia the last few years, 
has leased the Pickman gray cottage at Beverly Cove for 
this season. She had a cottage on Smith’s Point, Man- 
chester, last year. 
Oo 4 9 
The above rentals were made through the Boardman 
office of Manchester and Boston, who also report a num- 
ber of other leases the present week—including two at 
Beverly Farms, one at Manchester Cove and one at Bev- 
erly—which will be reported later. ig, 
acme. 
Walter D. Denégre and family will come on to “Villa 
Crest,” at West Manchester, about the middle of May. 
They have had a house in New York the past winter, but 
the month of March they spent at Palm Beach, and from 
there they went to New Orleans to remain most of April 
oO 3% © 
The Vincent club show will be the particular social 
attraction in Boston next week. Dress rehearsal will be 
held this afternoon and the performances will be on Mon- 
day, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday afternoons at 
the Wilbur “Theatre. The show is in aid of the Vincent 
Memorial hospital. It is a musical comedy, “Hello 
Frisco.” 
; o & 9S 
Miss Eleonora Sears assisted Mrs. Charles W. Clark 
at the cake table at the Market Fete in San Francisco in 
aid of the Belgians. With Mrs. Clark, Miss Sears will 
attend the polo meet on the Peninsula. 
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“a 
HE joyous Easter bells were the wedding bells for 
scores of brides this week. Yesterday, April 27, the 
wedding of Miss Irene Langhorne Gibson, daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson, of New. York, ind 
George B. Post, Jr., of New York, took place in St. Bar- 
tholomew’s church and was followed by a reception at 
the Gibson home. Miss Nancy Perkins was maid ot 
honor and the other attendants were the Misses Harriet 
A. Post, Nathalie Wood, Helen Crocker, Evelyn Preston, 
Ruth Hapgood and Margot Scull. Chalmers Wood, Jr., 
acted as best man. The ushers were Bayard Tuckerman, 
Jr., a cousin of Mr. Post, and Q. A. Shaw McKean of the 
North Shore colony; Thomas H. Frothingham, C. Suy- 
dam Cutting, Grafton H. Pyne, Schuyler L. Parsons, Jr., 
Richard Van Nest Gambrill, Oliver W. Bird, Jr., Lang- 
horne Gibson, all of New York; and G. Dawson Coleman 
of Philadelphia. Mr. Post gave his farewell bachelor, 
dinner last Wednesday night at the Racquet and Tennis 
club. , 
Oo 8 O 
The marriage of Miss Phyllis Sears and Bayard 
Tuckerman, Jr., will be soleminzed on Tuesday, June 20, 
at noon, in the St. John’s Episcopal church, Beverly 
Farms. A reception will follow at the home of Miss 
Sears’ father, Herbert M. Sears, in Pride’s Crossing. 
% 9 
Mrs. Henry St. John Smith (Constante Wharton), 
as matron of honor, will be Miss Rosamond Eliot’s only 
attendant, when she is married on Saturday, May 20, at 
noon, at the Emmanuel Episcopal church, Manchester, to 
Frederick M. Burnham. Miss Eliot was one of Mrs. 
Smith’s bridesmaids at her wedding in Groton last June. 
oO 8 9 
Miss Josephine Rantoul, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Neal Rantoul, of Boston and Beverly Farms, and Henry 
Alexander Murray, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry A 
Murray, of New York, will be married at the Beverly 
Farms home on Memorial Day, instead of June 10, as the 
BREEZE stated two weeks ago. Miss Rantoul’s attend- 
ants will be the Misses Elaine Denégre, Phyllis Sears, 
Nathalie Thayer, Harriet Dexter, Elizabeth Ford, Caro- 
line Fessenden, Olivia Ames and Ellie Rantoul. Miss 
Rantoul is a niece of Mrs. Charles C. Auchincloss of 
New York and of John I. and Robert Saltonstall all of 
Boston. 
o 8 9 
The wedding of Miss Ruth H. Cutting, daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. R. Fulton Cutting, and Reginald L. G. 
Auchincloss, son of Mrs. Edgar S. Auchincloss, will take 
place on May 2. Mr. Auchincloss is a grandson of the 
late Samuel Sloan, and both have many relatives of social 
prominence. The Rev. Dr. Endicott Peabody, of Groton, 
will officiate and the ceremony will take place at the 
chapel of St. George’s Church. Miss Cutting’s only at- 
tendant will be her sister, Miss Elisabeth McE. Cutting. 
Mr. Peter Cooper Bryce, son of General and Mrs, Lloyd 
