SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. Richard J. Monks and Miss 
Grace Monks of Boston and Man- 
chester, have been spending the past 
two weeks at Hotel Gotham, 5th 
avenue and 55th street, New York. 
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Congressman A. P. Gardner and 
family removed to Washington, 
D.C., from Hamilton, December Ist. 
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The Herbert W. Masons have 
closed their Ipswich estate and are 
settled at their winter home, 14 
Gloucester street, Boston, for the 
winter. 
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Miss Fanny P. Mason of Boston 
and Beverly Cove, was among the 
passengers on the Lusitania which 
arrived last Friday in New York. 
Miss Mason has been abroad since 
July Ist. 
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Joseph Clark Grew, the first sec- 
retary of the American embassy in 
Vienna, and Mrs. Grew, were pass- 
engers on the outgoing Lusitania 
Wednesday of last week. They 
have been the guests of Mrs. Ed- 
ward S. Grew of Boston and West 
Manchester. ations 
Tomorrow evening at 8 o’clock 
in the Church of the Messiah, St. 
Louis, will take place the wedding 
of Miss Acrata von Schrader of St. 
Louis and Arthur Hunnewell Shaw 
of Boston. Miss Schrader, who has 
not been presented, is the daughter 
Seer, and. Mrs. Otto...U: Von 
Shrader. The wedding is of much 
interest to North Shore society as 
Mr. Shaw’s parents spend part of 
their summers at Manchester at The 
Brownlands and are very prominent 
socially in Boston. Herbert B. 
Shaw, a cousin, who married Miss 
Alice Sohier of Boston and Burgess 
Point, Beverly, is in St. Louis to 
serve as an usher. Following the 
church ceremony there will be a re- 
ception at the von Schrader home 
on Lindell boulevard. Mr. Shaw 
will bring his bride to Boston where 
they will spend the winter. 
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Miss Margaret P. Draper of Wash- 
ington and Manchester, was among 
the guests at the luncheon Mrs. 
Nicholas Anderson gave at Wash- 
ington Tuesday afternoon. 
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Mrs. Robert D. Evans of Boston 
and Burgess Point, Beverly, opened 
her town house, 17 Gloucester. street, 
Boston, yesterday morning for a 
meeting of the Thursday Morning 
Musical club. 
Cut used courtesy Boston Saturday Sun 
MRS. THOMAS BRATTLE GANNETT, JR. 
The recent bride, daughter of former Governor Eben S. Draper 
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Judge W. C. Loring, who is still 
confined to his Pride’s Crossing cot- 
tage by illness, was reported not 
quite so well this week. 
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‘‘Selwood,’’ the Thomas M. Mc- 
Kee estate at Beverly Farms, is now 
closed and the family are settled in 
New York for the winter. 
Among the late sojourners at 
Pride’s, who closed their cottages 
on Tuesday, were the A. P. Lorings, 
Sr., and Ellis Dresel, Esq. Both 
families removed to Boston. 
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Mrs. Robert 8S. Bradley of Boston 
and Pride’s Crossing, will deliver 
her lecture on ‘‘The House Fly”’ at 
the January meeting of the Wenham 
Village Improvement society. 
The sixteenth annual Christmas 
bazaar and doll sale in aid of the 
New England Home for Crippled 
Children opened yesterday morning 
in the Banquet Hall of Hotel Bruns- 
wick, Boston. Mrs. Taft has sent a 
gift, Mr. and Mrs. Ezra C. Fitch 
have given a beautiful gold watch, 
and a rare collection of old pewter 
has been donated. Mrs. Eugene N. 
Foss, Mrs. Ezra C. Fitch, Mrs. G. 
Stanley Hall are to be among the 
pourers each afternoon. There will 
be rooms reserved for bridge and 
auction bridge every afternoon, of 
which Mrs. George B. Foster will 
take charge. The sale closes to- 
morrow evening, 
