6 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. Annie H. Armour, the widow of Kirkland Brooks 
Armour, former president of the Armour Packing Com- 
pany of Chicago, who spent the summer at one of the 
Wilkins cottages, Magnolia, was married quietly Tues- 
day of this week at the Waldorf Astoria, New York, to 
Capt. Chas. W. Littlefield, paymaster ‘of the United 
States Navy, attached to the Boston Navy Yard. Only 
the immediate family was present. There were no at- 
tendants. The ceremony was performed by Rev. James 
S, Holland, rector of St. Bartholomew’s Chapel and 
. afterward a wedding breakfast was served. It is under- 
stood that Capt. Littlefield has been granted a long 
furlough and that he and his bride will take an ex- 
tended honeymoon. Capt. and Mrs. Littlefield will be 
at home after Dec. 1, at 24 East Armour Boulevard, 
Kansas City, Mo. 
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert B. Shaw (Alice Sohier), who 
have been visiting Mr. Shaw’s parents in Lenox, are 
again at Beverly Cove as the guests of Col. and Mrs. 
William D. Sohier. Mr. and Mrs. Shaw have taken the 
house at the corner of Mt. Vernon and West Cedar 
streets, Boston, and will live there the coming winter. 
A distinguished visitor to the North Shore over the 
last week-end was Mrs. Whitelaw Reid, wife of the 
American ambassador to Great Britain. Mrs. Taft was 
Mrs. Reid’s hostess at the summer White House at Bur- 
gess point. 
Mrs. L. C. Hanna concluded her stay at ‘‘Jumbo Cot- 
tage,’’ Beverly Farms, last Saturday and returned to 
Cleveland. Mr. Luke and family have removed from 
‘‘The Gables,’? where they have lived this summer, to 
Jumbo cottage and will remain there until Nov. 1, when 
they will go south. 
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Moore (nee Hanna) also left Bev- 
erly Farms last Saturday for their New York home. 
‘‘Round Plain Farm,’’ Beverly Farms, until Jan. 1. 
Mrs. Allen Curtis and Miss Curtis were due from New 
York today, after a short visit. They are not leaving 
their beautiful estate on Oak street, Beverly Farms, 
untal after Thanksgiving. 
The William Endicotts closed their Pride’s Crossing 
cottage this week and moved to their town house at 32 
Beacon Street, Boston, Tuesday. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry P. King of Pride’s have returned 
from their sojourn in Tuxedo Park, N. Y. 
Col. and Mrs. R. H. Stevenson planned to leave the 
Saltonstall cottage at Pride’s Thursday of this week, 
and open their winter home on Beacon street, Boston. 
Gardner Hubbard of West Manchester, the aeroplan- 
ist, will serve as best man at the wedding of Miss 
Dorothy Pierce, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dean 
Pierce of Brookline and Frederick Ingersol Emery, Har- 
vard, 1902, son of Mr. and Mrs. Woodward Emery of 
Cambridge, on Wednesday next at St. Paul’s church, 
Brookline. 
Hon. G. H. Lyman of Beverly Farms is recuperating 
at his North Shore summer home from injuries received 
in a hunting trip in New Brunswick. While walking 
through dense underbrush, the string of his moccasin 
caught in a root and he was thrown heavily to the 
eround and severely injured. His remoteness from 
medical aid aggravated his injuries and physical con- 
dition in such a manner that when he reached eiviliza- 
tion he was in a very bad way, but is now on the road to 
complete recovery. 
John W. Cutler will give his bachelor dinner at the 
Essex County club, Manchester, tomorrow night inci- — 
dent to his marriage to Miss Rosamond Fish, daughter — 
of Mr. and Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish, on Oct. 22, at Garri- 
son, N. Y. The guests to be entertained are his brothers, — 
Roger and George Cutler, Louis A. Shaw of Beverly 
Farms and Francis Burr, all of Boston; Sidney W. Fish, 
Hamilton Fish, jr., Fulton Cutting. who has been on the 
North Shore this past season, these three from New — 
York. Other Harvard classmates to be present will be — 
F. Meredith Blagden, E. Morgan Gilbert, F. 8. von 
Stade, Charles L. Appleton, Munroe D. Robinson, 
George B. Wagstaff, Clarence Hay, George P. Denny and 
Evelyn Dupont Irving. Elliott Cutler, another brother, 
will be his best man. 
The late Mrs. Helen M. Nason, widow of Jesse L. Nason, 
who passed away at her summer home in Beverly, after 
a long illness, is the mother of Harry L. Nason of the 
banking firm of H. L. Nason & Co. 
was at 1471 Beacon street, Brookline. 
Mrs. John A. Caswell is planning to remain at 
Master John Caswell has entered St. Mark’s Bee 
Southboro. 
Gordon Abbott and family are removing from West 
Manchester to Boston, Oct. 10. 
Ilenry 8S. Grew, 2d, and family left their very attrac- 
tive summer home at West Manchester, Monday of this 
week to facilitate the plans of the younger members of 
the family is settling in school. . 
The H. D. Seotts of Wellesley, who spent the early 
autumn in Bar Harbor, concluded their stay at Boveri 
Tuesday. 
Miss E. C. MeVickar of Proyidence brought ie North 
Shore season to a close on Friday last and closed ‘‘The 
Alhambra,’’ her Pride’s estate. 
Among last week’s arrivals at “The Fairfax,”’ Bever- 
ly, were B. Kronstrand, Stockholm, Sweden, and Mrs. 
M. K. Baker, Boston. 
Associate Waeiiae William Hi. Moody, who is still at 
Magnolia, resigned Tuesday of this week from the U. S. 
Supreme bench. President Taft wrote to Justice Moody 
accepting the resignation with reluctance and express- 
ing his high regard for the retiring jurist. He will re- 
ceive the full pay of an active member of the court, 
$12,000 a year. 
Mrs. Susan Preston Draper, widow of Gen. William 
I’. Draper, who is still at the Bradbury cottage, Man- 
chester, has offered to erect at Congregational Park, 
Milford, a statue of Gen. Draper, on condition that the 
plot remain forever without buildings and that the 
town shall forever maintain it as a park. The towns- 
people have accepted the gift. 
Mon. Portalis, chargé d’affaires of France, his family 
and legation attaches, left Manchester for Washington, 
Monday afternoon. The Italian legation has also been 
transferred to Washington. 
Miss Naney Hutchinson of Philadelphia concluded a 
visit with Mrs. Bernard C. Weld, Beverly Farms, Wed- 
nesday. Miss Susan Thayer of Boston and Lancaster, 
who was Mrs. Weld’s guest also, has gone on to New- 
port. 
‘‘Lodgehurst,’’ the cottage on Smith’s Point, Man- 
chester, occupied this year by the Frederie Foster 
Careys, is closed, the family having taken up their 
autumn residence in Tuxedo Park. Mrs. Carey’s sister, 
Mrs. Stoughton Bell, is still at the Smith Farm, Proctor 
street, Manchester. 
Her winter home © 
