22 | NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Bradley of 411 Common- 
wealth avenue, Boston, and Pride’s, and their daughters, 
Miss Leslie and Miss Frances Bradley were passengers 
on the Franconia and will remain abroad until July. 
Miss Rosamond Bradley did not accompany her parents, 
but is at her home on Commonwealth avenue. 
ak tok 
Judge William Caleb Loring and Mrs. Loring of 
Boston and Pride’s, gave a dinner of 14 covers at their 
home, 2 Gloucester street, in honor of their nephew, 
Augustus P. Loring, Jr., and his fiancee, Miss Rosamond 
Bowditch, whose engagement was recently announced. 
The guests included Miss Olivia Thorndike and her fi- 
ance, Nathaniel Simpkins Jr., Miss Charlotte Hemenway, 
Miss May Loring, Miss Ella Lyman, Miss Mary Park- 
man, Miss Anna Gardiner, Henry G. Vaughan, Messrs. 
Gray, Sargent and Martin. 
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Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Brown of Everett, are at their 
cottage on Sea street, Manchester, for several weeks’ 
sojourn. 
RE ic 
Mrs. Henry S. Grew of Boston, will arrive at Man- 
chester June first. Her household servants will come 
ncxt week to get the cottage in readiness for her arrival. 
The intervening time Mrs. Grew will spend with her son 
ii Dover. 
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Miss Katherine E. Silsbee of Boston, has arrived 
at her cottage on Boyle street, Beverly Cove. 
* 
Mrs. Frances P. Lefavour of Boston, has opened 
her summer home on Hale street, Beverly. 
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Henry Clay Pierce of St. Louis, spent the last week- 
end at his Pride’s estate. He came in his private car 
Zamora. He left Pride’s Crossing Monday ‘night. 
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Judge and Mrs. W. C. Loring of Boston, spent the 
last week-end at their Pride’s estate. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. John Hays Hammond of Washington 
and Gloucester, gave a large reception at their Rhode 
Island avenue residence in Washington last Friday eve- 
ning. The reception was given for the members of the 
Women’s Welfare Department of the Civic Federation, 
which had held its first session at the Hammond home 
earlier in the day. Assisting Mrs. Hammond in re- 
ceiving were Mrs. Sherman, wife of the Vice-President ; 
Mrs. Wickersham, wife of the Attorney General; Mrs. 
Meyer, wife of the Secretary of the Navy; Mrs. Lur- 
ton, Mrs. Lamar, Mrs. Hughes and Mrs. Holmes, wives 
of justices of the Supreme Court; Mrs. Oliver, wife 
cf the Assistant Secretary of War, and Mrs. Beekman 
Winthrop, wife of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy. - 
Kk Ok Ox 
E. M. Wheelwright and family of Boston, arrived 
Monday noon at Beverly Fatms for the season. 
* * Ox 
Baron d’Estournelles de Constant has presented to 
President Taft a medal from the International Concilia- 
tion Society. 
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An engagement of interest in Boston and elsewhere 
is that of Miss Julia A. Hoyt, daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. Gerald L. Hoyt of New York, and Samuel A. 
Velldon of Washington, which has been announced in 
New York by Miss Hoyt’s parents. Mrs. Hoyt was an 
Appleton before her marriage and she is a cousin of 
John Appleton Tuckerman of 201 Bay State road, Bos- 
ton, and Ipswich, who was married to Miss Katherine 
Atterbury of New York the past winter. Other Boston 
relatives of Miss Hoyt are Mrs. Charles S. Tuckerman of 
Bay State road, who is John A. Tuckerman’s mother; 
Mrs. George von L. Meyer (Alice Appleton), the Misses 
Alice and Julia Meyer, Randolph M. Appleton of Ips- 
wich and his daughters, Mrs. Alfred Vincent Kidder, 
Miss Marjorie and Miss Julia Appleton, and Mrs. Louis 
Chapin of London, a daughter of Mrs. Charles S. Tucker- 
nian. Miss Hoyt’s brother is Lydig Hoyt. Her parents 
have a summer home at Stratsburg, N. Y. 
Ditty sek ae 
FRERN | @R@EeT a NON 
is partly rebuilt and is open for business. 
can accommodate roo guests for dinner at one 
time. 
than ever. Telephone Danvers 45. 
Music same as last year. Dinner better 
We 
222-333 333—333-3>33 
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