SOCIETY NOTES 
x er. and Mrs. Marshall Fabyan of Boston spent the last 
week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Pereival Lombard at their 
el ottage on Hospital Point, Beverly. Mr. and Mrs. Lom- 
_ba rd are remaining at their summer home until Oct. 31. 
_ Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Beals will keep their beauti- 
= new summer home open at Burgess Point, Beverly, 
u atil after Christmas. 
- Monday evening Dr. and Mrs. John C. Phillips con- 
tinued their series of autumn dinners at ‘‘ Knobbfield,’’ 
pares North Beverly estate. 
B. Kronstrand, the celebrated portrait painter, of 
~ Stockholm, Sweden, concluded a three weeks’ stay at 
the Fairfax, Beverly, Monday, being near the summer 
: White House for sittings by Mrs. Taft for her portrait, 
which proved a great success. Mr. Kronstrand has 
_ painted many of the crowned heads of Europe. He en- 
larged the number of distinguished people who have 
; "visited the North Shore this season. 
Pepa ero eee), 
Prince Koudacheff, counsellor of the Russian embassy, 
has arrived in Washington, after passing the summer 
in Europe. 
_ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leiter have taken a hotel cot- 
tage at the Virginia Hot Springs and have as guests 
_ Mrs. Leiter’s mother and sister, Mrs. J. R. Williams and 
Miss Dorothy Williams of Washington. Mr. and Mrs. 
_ Leiter recently gave a luncheon of twelve covers at 
| Passifern. 
The Count and Countess de Chambrun, the former the 
_ military attache of the French embassy, have been en- 
_ tertained at Hot Springs recently by Miss Ruth Harri- 
. .SOn: 
Count Von Bernstorff, the Gernan ambassador, and 
family were passengers on the Kaiser Wilhelm IL, 
_ which sailed for New York Tuesday of this week. 
John W. Cutler of Brookline, it is reported, is to bring 
his bride-elect, Miss Rosalind Fish, daughter of Hamil- 
- ton Fish of New York, to Beverly Farms to pass the 
winter. Both are fond of out-door life and particularly 
_ the seashore. 
_ . Ferdinand von Stumm, second secretary of the Ger- 
“man embassy, and his American bride (Miss Constance 
Hoyt of Washington and Philadelphia), who spent the 
_ early part of their honeymoon in Manchester, are lo- 
cated in Stuttgart, Wurtemberg, Germany, where Herr 
yon Stumm has a diplomatic post. The appointment is 
necessary, when a German diplomat marries a foreign 
wife, that said wife may be thoroughly Germanized be- 
fore being sent to a foreign capital. 
The Marchese di Montagliari, who has been charge 
‘d’affaires of the Italian embassy at Manchester the past 
‘summer, welcomed the new successor of Baron Mayor 
des Planches in New York and returned with him to the 
capital. The new Italian ambassador is Marquis Cusani 
3 Cenfalonieri and his first secretary is Marquis Negrotto 
Cambraso. They came from Switzerland and next 
‘month will be joined. by the Marquis’ wife and two 
children. The Italian embassy at the capital is the 
-fermer home of Mrs. Hearst and is one of the finest and 
Bergest i in Washington. 
Mrs. Robert S. Bradley is remaining at Pride’s until 
Nov. 1. Mr. Bradley and Miss Bradley are still abroad. 
Mrs. Edward B. Haven is concluding her stay at 
Beverly Farms the first of next week, when she will 
open her Boston residence on Beacon str eet. 
q 
church, Boston. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE a 
SOCIETY NOTES 
North Shore society is much interested in the report- 
ed engagement of Miss Cornelia Wolcott, only daughter 
of the late Governor and Mrs. Roger Wolcott and the 
Rev. Mr. Drury, submaster of the St. Paul’s school, who 
was for a-long time~associated with St. Stephen’s 
Miss Wolecott’s brother, 8S. Huntington 
Wolcott, married Miss Hannah Stevenson, second 
daughter of Col. and Mrs. Robert H. Stevenson, who 
spent the past summer at the Saltonstall cottage, Pride’s 
Crossing. 
Mrs. Larz Anderson and Mrs. Clarence Edwards are 
ia Berlin as members of the party of U. S. Secretary of 
War Dickinson, who have been making a_ several 
months’ trip abroad. 
W. Harry Brown and family of Pittsburg have con- 
cluded their stay at Beverly Cove, having been neigh- 
bers of President Taft and family. 
Charles E. Cotting and family closed their summer 
home on Harbor street, West Manchester, Monday. 
They were guests of honor at a small dinner party 
previous to their departure given by Mrs. Gordon Prince 
of West Manchester. Mrs. Prince and family con- 
cluded their stay at their West Manchester cottage 
Thursday. Gordon Chickering Prince entertained his 
friend, Mr. Peters, over the last week-end. They en- 
joyed a yachting trip to Marblehead where the Prince 
yacht went out of commission for the season. 
Mrs. G. S. Curtis and family, who had the small 
Higginson cottage at West Manchester for several 
weeks this autumn departed Tuesday afternoon. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bemis are still absent from their 
Beverly Farms summer estate and are continuing the 
pleasures of hunting in the Rockies. They plan to keep 
their Farms residence open on their return until after 
Thanksgiving. 
The families of Mrs. Charles H. Dalton and Henry 
R. Dalton gave up the pleasures of the North Shore 
Tuesday of this week and have entered into metro- 
politan life at their Boston homes. 
No Trouble to Show Goods 
‘This necklace, madam,’’ said the salesman newly 
promoted to the curio department, ‘‘was originally 
made for the Duke of Buckingham, who gave it to Anne 
of Austria. We’re selling a lot of the.’’—Hverybody’s 
Magazine. 
In The Family Circle 
‘‘Pa, what is an equinox?’’ 
‘““Why, it’s—it’s— Don’t they teach you anything 
at school? I thought you studied mythology. An 
equinox, my son, is a fabled animal, half-horse, half-ox. 
Its name is derived from ‘equine,’ meaning horse, and 
‘ox.’ Schools are different now from what they were 
when I was a boy.’’—Hverybody’s Magazine. 
Let The Breeze attend to your printing wants. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
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