NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
VOL. IX 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Lieut. Allen Kimberley, USA, 
whose engagement to Miss Marion 
Bicknell of Boston, was recently an- 
nounced, has been ordered from 
Fort Howard, Maryland, where he 
has been stationed for some time, 
and is now in command of one of 
the mine planters at Old Point, Va- 
Lieut. Kimberley is highly con- 
nected, both in Maryland and Vir- 
ginia. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. 
Charles Kimberley of Old Point and 
a relative of Gen. Felix Agnus and 
of Mrs. Osear Leser, wife of Judge 
Leser of the Tax Court of Balti- 
more, who frequently visits in Bos- 
ton and on the North Shore at East 
Gloucester. The date for the wed- 
ding has not yet been fixed. Gen. 
Felix Agnus is the owner of the 
Baltimore American. 
090909 
The North Shore colonists settled 
in Boston homes helped swell the 
audience at last Friday afternoon’s 
symphony concert. Among them 
were: Mrs. Eben S. Draper and 
Miss Dorothy Draper, bride-elect; 
Mrs. Barrett Wendell, Jr., Miss 
Juliet Higginson, Mrs. Gordon Ab- 
bott, Mrs. Harcourt Amory, Miss 
Gertrude Amory, Mrs. W. B. P. 
Weeks, Mrs. George D. Howe, Miss 
Katherine Foote, Mrs. Charles E. 
Cotting and her sister, Mrs. H. G. O. 
Colby, Mrs. Boylston A. Beal, Mrs. 
Henry S. Grew, Mrs. F. L. Higgin- 
son, Jr., Mrs. Reginald H. Fitz and 
many others. 
oO 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Bartlett 
(Serita Lincoln, the recent bride), 
are daily visitors in Beverly Farms 
preparing their home, the Bartlett 
cottage on Grove street, for their 
occupancy. Mrs. Lincoln joined 
her daughter on Monday to assist 
in her preparations. 
oo 9° 
Departures this week from Bev- 
erly Farms summer homes included 
Dr. Jackson and family, Mrs. Henry 
©. Weston and the Samuel D. War- 
rens all removing to Boston resi- 
dences for the winter. 
o¢Oo°O 4 
Mrs. Henry W. Stephens of De- 
troit, who is a late sojourner at 
Pride’s, gave a luncheon for five 
on Tuesday. 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1911. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Munn, 
Jr., of Beacon street, Boston, and 
West Manchester, who have been 
spending some days in Philadelphia 
before sailing for Europe, gave a 
farewell hospitality which took the 
form of a dinner-dance at the Rad- 
nor Hunt Club. The guests in- 
cluded the younger married set, the 
men and young women who have 
been socially prominent for the past 
five years, the debutantes of last 
season, the hunting set and _ the 
younger dancing men. Mr. Munn’s 
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and 
Mrs. Reginald Boardman, were of 
those bidden. Mrs. Munn is being 
felicitated upon her responsibilities 
as aunt, a son having been born sev- 
eral days ago, to Mr. and Mrs. A. J- 
Drexel Paul (Isabel Biddle), who 
are very prominent in the Islesboro 
colony in Maine. 
oOo 9°09 
Miss Margaret Carlton, who an- 
nounced her engagement to John 
Tyler at the Stevens-Coolidge wed- 
ding at Magnolia during the late 
season, was wedded at the Church 
of Our Saviour, Longwood, Boston, 
last Saturday afternoon at 2 o’clock 
in the presence of many _ guests. 
Gordon Prince of Boston and West 
Manchester, served as an_ usher. 
The reception followed at the J. 
Tracy Eustis residence, where Mr. 
Tyler has resided. The bride is an 
orphan and was given in marriage 
by her brother, William L. Carleton. 
Mr. and Mrs. Tyler are on an auto 
honeymoon trip. Their future home 
will be at 1056 Beacon. street, 
Brookline: 
o0O9 9 
Manchester colonists to close 
summer homes the past week and re- 
move to winter residences were the 
William H. Wellingtons of Beacon 
street, Boston; the E. L. Woods of 
Cypress street, Brookline, and the 
George E. Cabots of Marlboro street, 
Boston. 
oOo 90 9 
Francis Bartlett, esq., of Beacon 
street, Boston, will remain at Pride’s 
until November 15th. 
oOo °° 
The Walcott Tuckermans have 
closed their Ipswich cottage and re- 
turned to New York. 
NO. 43 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The coming social season at 
Washington will be made very in- 
teresting by the arrival of two new 
diplomatic families. Senor de Cres- 
po will represent Mexico, Mon. 
Bakmetieff, Russia. The Crespos 
will be one of the most interesting 
families to come as Mexican repre- 
sentatives to Washington. There 
are seven children the oldest being 
seventeen years. She is a fine musi- 
cian, educated in Austria and the 
Milan Conservatory. The second 
daughter is a fine violinist—in fact 
all the children play some musical 
instrument. Senora Crespo is ac- 
complished and speaks English. 
The family’s private fortune will 
permit them to maintain a position 
befitting their station as they did at 
their previous post in Vienna, where 
they had a residence in the beautiful 
Platz leading out toward Schoen- 
brum. Mon. and Mme. Bakmetieff 
take up their life at the American 
capital after an absence of twenty 
years or more. Mon. Bakmetieff 
succeeds Baron de Rosen. 
oOo 99 
Among the guests at the wedding 
last Saturday of Francis Austin 
Harding and Dorothy Sherbourne 
Warren at the Unitarian Church, 
Jamaica Plain, were two North 
Shore brides, Mrs- Nathaniel Simp- 
kins, Jr., and Mrs. Augustus P. 
Loring, Jr. Mrs. Simpkins was in 
blue satin veiled in grey chiffon and 
a white beaver hat faced with pale 
blue velvet. Mrs. Simpkins, Sr., 
and Miss Faith Simpkins were also 
present. The former was attired in 
violet broadcloth with plumed hat 
to match. Miss Simpkins wore ame- 
thyst ottoman silk, gray satin hat 
with marabout plumes. Mrs. Lor- 
ing’s costume was violet broad- 
eloth with a green hat. 
oOo°9 
Mrs. Herman Kampmann and 
family before leaving for San An- 
tonio, Texas, after a summer and 
early autumn sojourn at Beverly, 
were registered at Hotel Plaza, New 
York. 
oOo 9° 4% 
R. T. Crane, Jr., and family of 
Chicago, will bring their season to 
a close at Castle Hill, Ipswich, No- 
vember 4th. 
