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SOCIETY NOTES. 
- The Francis M. Stanwoods, after a long season on 
the North Shore, closed their summer home on Smith’s 
Point, Manchester, yesterday and returned to town for 
the winter. They have taken a house at 90 Ivy street, 
_ Brookline, this winter, 
i. IY, 
Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Mandell of Boston and Beverly 
- Cove celebrated their golden wedding Tuesday evening 
by a family gathering at the Algonquin club, Boston. 
A dinner of sixty covers was given, the guests present 
F. Hovey & Co., and a few surviving friends of their 
early married life. 
Major Henry L. Higgimson of Boston and West Man- 
chester presided at the banquet. at Hotel Somerset, Bos- 
ton, Tuesday evening given by the Harvard Club of 
_ Boston to the Harvard Varsity crew of 1910. 
On Tuesday was held the first meeting of the new 
aud exclusive skating club at the Arena, Boston. 
_ Among the patronesses' are Mrs. Oliver Ames and Miss 
Mary Josephine Amory. 
f es Sis 
Recent contributors to the Edward Everett Hale 
Statue fund include Augustus P. Loring of Pride’s $50 
_ and Mrs. George D. Howe, Manchester, $50. The amount 
is now $14,650: 
_ Ernest Jackson, Prof. Charles Loring Jackson and 
Miss Anna P. Jackson have. concluded their long S0- 
journ at Pride’s. There were passengers on the White 
Star line steamer Zeeland which left Boston Tuesday 
morning for Europe. 
—_x-— 
Late sojourners among the Hamilton colonists are the 
Frederick J. Alleys and the Reginald C. Robbins. 
| aes 
The members of the Harvard football team spent the 
last week-end at the Myopia Hunt Club. 
AORN 
Departures from Pride’s Crossing summer homes this 
week include Mr: and Mrs. William A. Burnham and 
Mr. and Mrs. Augustus P. Loring on Monday. On the 
- same day, Judge and Mrs. W. C. Loring removed to 
their winter residence on Gloucester street, Boston. 
—x— 
Mrs. James F. Curtis concluded her stay at her 
Pride’s estate Thursday and: opened her Boston _ resi- 
dence on Marlboro street for the winter. 
MISS 
REGISTRY OFFICE 
Competent. Well Trained 
Servants Supplied—but 
only after thorough in- 
vestigation of references 
a 
being relatives and members of Mr. Mandell’s firm, C. 
47 West 34th St. 
TELEPHONES : MURRAY HILL 2943- 2944 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
ec MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1910. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Count and Countess von Wedel; who spent part of 
the summer a t Manchester, were guests of honor at a 
dinner given last Friday evening by the German am- 
bassador and Countess von Bernstorff, at Washington. 
Count Wedel, the retiring counsellor of the embassy, 
will sail next week for Germany. The second Secre- 
tary of the British Embassy and Mrs. Kennard gave a 
luncheon in their honor last Sunday. 
_—xX— 
Mr. and Mrs. George Dexter bring their season’s stay 
at Pride’s to a close tomorrow and will remove to their 
Boston home on Commonwealth avenue. 
—_x-— 
Henry Clay Frick will be a box-holder at the Nixon 
theatre, Pittsburg, Nov. 22 at the appearance of Miss 
Ellen Terry in her ‘‘acted discource’’ of ‘‘The Hero- 
ines of Shakespeare’’. The lecture is given under the 
auspicies of the Free Kindergarten association. 
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Mrs. Henry May and the Misses Cecelia and Isabel 
May, since their return to Washington from Manches- 
ter, have been sojourning at the Virginia Hot Springs. 
— x— 
Advices: from Washington Monday reported the criti- 
eal illness of Preston Gibson, the dramatist, who spent 
the summer at Beverly Farms. He was brought to 
Washington from New York by special train last Mon- 
day. The many North Shore friends of Mr. and. Mrs. 
Gibson (Grace Jarvis) hope for a speedy recovery. 
aS ee 
Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, sr., of Cincinnati and 
Pride’s Crossing is in Pittsburg, the house guest of her 
daughter, Mrs. Buckner A. Wallingford, jr., of Ridge 
avenue. Mrs. Longworth had been in Washington visit- 
ing her son-in-law and daughter, Count and Countess 
de Chambrun, previous to arriving in Pittsburg. 
—_—xXx— 
Mrs. D. Herbert Hostetter is among the season’s sub- 
seribers to the forth-coming series of four visiting or- 
ehestral concerts given under the auspicies of the Pitts- 
burg Orchestra Association. December 5, the New 
York Philharmonic orchestra appears; Jan. 30, the Bos- 
ton Symphony orchestra; February 21 and March 27 
the Thomas orchestra of Chicago. 
; ies 
Among the late sojourners at Beverly Cove, who 
have returned to Boston recently, are Col. and Mrs. 
Cranmore Wallace and Col. and Mrs. Wm. D. Sohier. 
Percival Lombard and family are also settled in their 
winter home in Denver. 
WILD 
‘ 
Special Care taken in 
MARBRIDGE BUILDING S¢lecting Servants for 
Out of Town. 
Circular Sent on Request 
New York 
