VOL. IX 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Miss Maude Scudder of St. Louis 
and Magnolia was a bridesmaid at 
the wedding last Saturday noon of 
Miss Frances Habirshaw, daughter 
of Mrs. Frederic MHabirshaw of 
Longwood, Boston, and Henry Gor- 
don Hawes, Jr., of Philadelphia. 
The wedding, which was a Brookline 
society event, was solemnized at the 
Church of Our Saviour, Longwood, 
by the Rey. Reginald H. Howe. The 
bridesmaids were all classmates of 
the bride at Miss Dowe’s school, 
Briar-Cliff-on-Hudson. They wore 
pink satin gowns trimmed with vio- 
let chiffon and pink and violet pic- 
ture hats. They carried pink roses 
and violets. The ushers and best 
man were all Tech 10 men. A re- 
ception in the red room at the Som- 
erset, Boston, followed the wedding 
ceremony. Relatives and intimate 
friends of the couple were present. 
Mr. and Mrs. Hawes left Saturday 
for an automobile trip to Bryn 
Mawr, Pa., where they will be at 
home after “A as first. 
9°09 
Following their prolonged absence 
abroad Mr. and Mrs. Clarence 
Moore with Miss Frances Moore and 
their younger children are sailing 
for America on November Ist. The 
Moores went abroad prior to the 
coronation, and after touring on the 
continent established themselves in 
England. They are to pass the 
winter in Washington. 
o°o9° 0 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Munn, 
Jr., attended the race meet held 
on the estate of Joseph E. Widener 
of Elkins Park, Philadelphia, last 
Thurday and were also in atten- 
dance at the Bryn Mawr Horse 
Show. 
: oOo°9090 
The Henry P. Kings concluded 
their season’s stay at their Pride’s 
Crossing residence yesterday and 
removed to their winter home in 
Beacon street, Boston. 
990° 
The Frank P. Fraziers of New 
York, brought their season’s stay at 
the A. G. Thayer estate, West Man- 
chester, to a close Tuesday. The 
Fraziers now own this charming es- 
tate and will make it their perma- 
nent summer home. 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1911. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The marriage of Miss Dorothy 
Draper, daughter of former Goy- 
ernor Kben 8. Draper, to Thomas B. 
Gannett, Jr., of Boston, Cambridge 
and Manchester is to be celebrated 
at the ‘‘Ledges,’’ the Draper home 
in Hopedale, November 21st. Many 
invitations for the event have been 
sent out. Miss Draper is one of the 
most popular girls in the Back Bay 
set, and holds membership in the 
Chilton Club, the Sewing Circle and 
the Vincent Club. During the sum- 
mer she accompanied her father on 
a trip to Alaska, her return home in 
August being followed by the en- 
gagement announcement. Mr. Gan- 
nett is the son of Thomas B. Gannett 
of Cambridge, and is a member of 
the banking firm of Parkinson & 
Burr. He was graduated from Har- 
vard in the class of 1897, and holds 
eards in the Harvard club. of New 
York, the Tennis and Racquet club 
and the Oakley Country club. He 
spends his summers at The Brown- 
lands, Manchester. Miss Draper was 
a debutante two winters ago, when 
a ball was given in her honor at the 
Somerset, Boston. The wedding will 
be one of the largest and most brill- 
iant of the year and the trousseau 
one of the handsomest ever worn by 
a Boston bride. 
o°Oo°90 9° 
Frank Edward Johnson, who has 
spent many seasons at East Glouces- 
ter at The Mailman House, has a 
very finely written and illustrated 
article on ‘‘The Mole Men: An Ac- 
count of the Troglodytes-of South- 
ern Tunisia,’’ in the September is- 
sue of The National Geographic 
Magazine. There are sixty illustra- 
tions, many procured under perilous 
conditions. 
o°o°0 0 
Mr. and Mrs. Perey -D. Haughton 
concluded their stay at the Storer 
cottage, Manchester, last Saturday. 
9 Oo°09 
Mrs. William E. Littleton of Phil- 
adelphia, closed her Beverly Farms 
cottage today. 
oOo ¢O° 94 
Mrs. Henry Pratt McKean and 
Miss Juliet Higginson of the Pride’s 
colony, are in Winnetka, Illinois, the 
guests of Mrs. George Higginson, 
Jr. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
NO. 41 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Alfred Tennyson Dickens’ pres- 
ence in Boston has caused much so- 
cial and literary interest in the 
event, as he is the son of the great 
novelist, Charles Dickens. At the 
dinner at the Boston City club last 
Friday evening in his honor a re- 
ception followed attended by 200. 
Speaking at the close of evening Mr. 
Dickens expressed his appreciation 
of the honor done to him, and still 
more, through him to the illustrious 
dead, by the kindness and attention 
of which he had been the recipient 
during his stay in Boston. He re- 
called the fact that it was in Boston 
that his father gave 20 out of 75 
lectures, and that it was here also 
that he made the greater part of that 
large circle of intimate friends in 
America with whom he corresponded 
until his death and which included 
two women still living, Mrs. James 
T. Fields of Boston and Manchester, 
wife of the publisher, and Miss 
Longfellow of Cambridge and Man- 
shester, for whose father’s poetry 
the great novelist had an especial 
admiration. He spoke of the great 
yvation given his father at his last 
American lecture in Boston and of 
the emotion with which, as though 
a premonition of his approaching 
end was before him, he bade good- 
by through the people of Boston to 
the American public. Mr. Dickens 
spoke at Lowell Monday, and then 
left upon an extended tour of the 
United States, returning to Europe 
about June. 
oOo 9°09 
Henry R. Dalton removed his 
household from Beverly Farms to 
Boston this week. 
20°09 0 
Mrs. Henry Stephens of Detroit 
and Pride’s, spent a portion of the 
week in New York. 
oOo9°0 04 
Among the recent Magnolia de- 
partures from the cottage settlement 
are Mrs. F. A. Lane of St. Louis and 
Mr. and Mrs. George F. Willett of 
Norwood. 
oOo OO 
The Heman M. Burrs of Chestnut 
street, Boston, who have occupied 
the Meeker cottage at Beverly 
Farms the past season, have removed 
to Boston. 
