8 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. A. M. Kidder of Englewood, N. J., has arrived 
at her summer home at Wenham Neck. 
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The Charles Bohlens of Philadelphia have arrived 
at their new summer home in Ipswich. 
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vacated their apart- 
and are settled at 
The ‘Thomas Cunninghams have 
ments at Hotel Touraine, Boston, 
Hillcroft, their Wenham estate. 
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Dr. E. C. Streeter of Boston has been making a short 
stay at ‘‘Uppergrass,” his Topsfield estate. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Rudolphe Agassiz are not expected at 
Hamilton until June 7th. The New Jersey and Long 
Island polo games malt greatly engage Mr. Agassiz’s at- 
tention until that time. 
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Dr. Charles ‘T. Parker of .New York and Hamilton, 
who is making an extended trip abroad, is now in Switzer- 
land. He does not plan to return to America until 
autumn. 
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Bernard C. Weld and family of Boston have arrived 
at the small George Lee cottage, Beverly Farms, which 
tliey occupied last season. They settled on Monday of 
this week. [he Cutlers, who have been occupying the 
cottage through the winter, have removed to their new 
country estate at Beaver Pond. 
Heman Burr and family of Boston, have settled in 
the Arthur Meeker cottage, Beverly Farms, for the 
season. ‘They arrived Tuesday. 
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Judge and Mrs. Oliver Wendell Holmes of Wash- 
ington have settled upon June 14th as the date upon 
which to arrive at their Beverly Farms summer home. 
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Horace D. Chapin and family of Brookline, will be 
at the Farms again. ‘They will join the ranks of the 
automobilists. ‘Their stable is being remodelled into a 
garage. 
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The Blodgetts, a western family, who have been in 
the habit of summering at York Harbor, have secured 
the attractive Saltonstall property at Pride’s, occupied last 
season by Col. and Mrs. R. H. Stevenson of Boston. 
They will arrive early next month. 
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Col. Wm. D. Sohier and family of Boston, settled 
at their summer home on Burgess Point, Beverly, Mon- 
day for the season. 
Mrs. Edwin Boardman has rented her summer 
heme, “The Lodge,” on West street, Beverly Farms, to 
Augustus Rantoul. She removed this week to the small 
cottage opposite “Villa al Mare,” the George Lee estate, 
Hale street, Beverly Farms. 
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Mrs. Wm. Robinson Cabot of Brookline, who has 
made frequent winter and spring sojourns at her Beverly 
Farms cottage, has settled there permanently for the 
season. 
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Baron De Rosen, Russian ambassador to the United 
States, has been appointed temporary director of the 
Russian foreign office. ‘The summer headquarters of the 
embassy is at Manchester. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Henry Clay Frick closed his New York residence 
this week and his family settled permanently for the 
season at Eagle Rock, Pride’s Crossing. As was the 
arrangement last season, Mr. Frick’s magnificent collec- 
tion of paintings have also been removed to ‘“Kagle Rock” 
i» adorn the summer mansion. A party of eight Welles- 
ley college girls, who secured special permission to go 
over the Frick estate, were shown over it last Monday 
morning. ‘They later came to Manchester and had picnic 
lunch at Singing Beach. 
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The George Lees of Chestnut Hill, who are abroad, 
are expected at Beverly Farms next month. 
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The Evans Memorial, which Mrs. Robert D. Evans 
oi Boston and Burgess Point, Beverly, is to give the 
Boston Museum of Fine Arts, will be started before 
autumn. Gardiner M. Lane of Boston and Manchester, 
president of the board of museum trustees, has accepted 
the gift. It will consist of a picture gallery 310 feet 
long, will face the Fenway and cost $500,000. ‘The late 
Mr. Evans was a trustee of the museum. 
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M. Jusserand, French ambassador to the United 
States, was among the guests of honor at the fourth aa 
nual dinner of the Harvard Cosmopolitan club held a 
the Harvard Union recently. ‘The summer henge 
of the French embassy will be at Manchester. 
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Nearly a thousand invitations have been issued by Mr. 
and Mrs. Frank T. Vose of 193 Bay State road, Boston, 
ts the double weddings of their daughters, Annie and 
Mabel Vose, to Ezra and Malcolm Eaton of the Hotel 
Scmerset, Boston, and Marblehead Neck. ‘The wedding 
will be held at the Second church in Boston, Unitarian, 
at noon, June Ist. The prospective bridegrooms are the 
scns of Charles S. Eaton, head of Thompson’s Spa, 219 
Washington street, Boston, and are associated with him 
in business at that place. The Eatons formerly lived at 
484 Commonwealth avenue, and the two young men were 
regular attendants of Back Bay social functions. It was 
at one of these that they met the two daughters of Mr. 
Vose and the acquaintance soon ripened into love with 
the result that a short time ago they announced their en- 
gagements on the same day. Mr. Eaton, senior, showed 
a preference for Marblehead as a home and gave up his 
Commonwealth avenue residence. His two sons, how- 
ever, were averse to living so far from their prospective 
brides and took a suite at the Hotel Somerset, Boston, a 
stone’s throw from the Vose home. 
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Baron Haniel von Heinhausen, counsellor to the Ger- 
nan embassy, with summer headquarters at Manches- 
ter, has accepted the position as German Ami ouan 
to Belgium. 
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The D. Herbert Hostetters of Pittsburg, are expected 
«t their North Beverly estate for the summer about June 
first. An addition has been. built to the house the past 
winter. 
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The Clement S. Houghtons of Suffolk road, Chestnut 
kill, expect to occupy their Coolidge Point estate, Man- 
chester, about July Ist. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Reginald C. Robbins gave a dinner 
to a number of guests at their Hamilton summer home, 
Lone ‘Tree Farm, Tuesday evening. 
