14 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
June 2, 1916. 
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BUTTER and EGGS 
Our Motto: 
BY resh 
Oldest and only Butter and Egg 
Telephones: 1431 and 1432 Richmond 
POOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 
Always Best Quality 
Laid Fancy Breakfast Eggs, and Best. Quality Butter for Table or Kitchen, Delivered as Wanted. 
PASTEURIZED BUTTER 3 
House in Boston conducted by the same family for three generations. : 
We take great pride in this record, and are now receiving the best butter handled in our long experience, 
the best Puter coming to Boston, iaitorie as to flaver and salt. : 
WH. LERNED_ & SONS 
We mike a specialty of delivering batter aid 2583 01 the North Shore, by our own trucks, or express charges 
prepaid. 
87 and 89 Faneuil Hall Market 
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The week has closed with another wedding of wide 
‘interest among North Shore colonies. Yesterday, June 1, 
Miss Elizabeth Hope Bancroft, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Robert Hale Bancroft, of Boston and Beverly, became the 
bride of Alexander Winsor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert 
Winsor, of Boston and Cataumet. The wedding took 
place-in Beverly where the Bancrofts have a fine old 
homestead, “Hale Farm.” 
These interesting weddings bring to mind that most 
interesting of all times to the friends concerned—the time 
of-the engagement announcement. Miss Josephine Ran- 
toul made her, announcement at a tea one afternoon last 
July at. her home. in Beverly Farms. . During the first 
ARE of August three engagements interested society in 
many circles. . Miss Eleanor Fabyan’s sia na ‘oO 
Theodore Frothingham, Jr.; Miss Elizabeth Hope Ban- 
croft’s to Mesander Winsor; and Miss Mirian Mason’s 
to Franklin H. Trumbull. The Fabyan-Frothingham 
wedding took place in Boston in the Old South Church 
during the week of pricey Malte Miss Mason and M-. 
Trumbull will be married in the Church wy the Ascension 
in Ipswich, Thursday, June 15, at 3 p. 
Another June wedding will be that je Miss Phyllis 
Sears and Bayard Tuckerman, Jr., at Beverly Farms on 
the zoth. Their engagement was announced in the early 
spring.: 
At the country place of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
Thomas ‘Newbold,' at Hyde Park, N. Y., Miss Mary E. 
Newbold will be married to William Gerald Dare Morgan, 
son of Mrs. William Dare Morgan, of 26 Washington 
Square North, New York, tomorrow. Miss Newbol 
has many prominent relatives on the North Shore. 
On June 10 the wedding of Miss Helen Morgan 
Hamilton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Pierson Ham- 
 ilton, of New York, to Police Commissioner Arthur 
Woods, of New York, will be of interest in prominent 
circles on the North Shore. - The wedding will take place 
at 1 o’clock in the private chapel on the Hamilton estate. 
Table Rock, at Sterlington, N. Y., and will be followed 
by. a breakfast. and, large reception. - .Miss ~Hamilton’s 
uncle, Bishop Rhinelander of* Philadelphia, will ‘officiate. 
Bishop and Mrs. P. M. Rhinelander (Helen Hamilton) 
spend their summers at Rockport in the Land’s End 
colony. Ae 
Sept: 19, in the Agassiz home, at Hamilton, the wed- 
ding of Miss Marie Dallas Agassiz, daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. R...L...Agassiz,,.and Cornelius Conway Felton, of 
Haverford, Pa., will take place. 
If a.man looks sharply and attentively, he shall see 
Fortune; for though she is blind she is not invisible— 
-. Bacon, | 
ENGAG rE MENTS of interest to the North Shore col- 
onies: 
Miss Helen Lancashire, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. 
J. H. Lancashire, of New York and Manchester, to Um- 
berto M. Coletti, of New York. 
Miss : a ean Baird, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
William J. Baird, of Philadelphia, to Harrison K. Caner, 
Jr., son of Mr. arid Mrs. Harrison K. Caner, of. Philadel- 
phia and Manchester. 
Miss Mary Orme, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon 
S. Orme, of New Orleans, to Donald Markle, son of Mr. 
and Mrs. Alvan Markle, of Hazelton, Pa., and a nephew 
of John Markle of New York and Manchester.. 
. Miss Corinna Searle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Charles P. Searle, of Boston and Ipswich, to Harold D. 
Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Howard Walker, of 
Boston. 
Miss Louise McAllister, daughter of Mrs. Hall Mc- 
Allister, of Boston and the ‘North Shore, to Nevil Ford, 
of Chestnut Hill. 
Miss Caroline W. Foster, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Chas. H. W.. Foster, of Boston and Marblehead, to Theo- 
dore Sizer, of New York. 
Miss Christine Snelling, daughter of Mrs. Russeil 
to Loring Wil- 
ee Fessenden, of Boston ond Marblehead. 
kins Coleman, of Chicago. 
Miss Margaret Stackpole, daughter of Mrs. Henry 
Stackpole, of Cambridge and Nahant, to cores C. Cute 
ler, Jr., of Brookline. 
A careless song, with a little nonsense in it now and 
then, does not misbecome a monarch.—IlValpole. 
QNE of the North Shore’s well known and well situated 
gs tea shops has changed ownership since last sea- 
son. The Fernery, located in the edge of Salem’s shop- 
ping deride was purchased by Mrs. Marjorie W.. Scrivin 
early in the year. Mrs. Scrivin, who is the widow of the 
late Curtis W. Scrivin, long connected with the S, S. 
Pierce Co., has had the shop ‘extensively altered and reno- 
vated. Delicious luncheons, afternoon teas and dainty 
suppers are served amid pleasing surroundings. In) ‘con- 
nection with the tea’ room’ is a food shop where every 
variety of delicious home cooking is sold. In addition to 
the dainty: cakes, pies and wholesome bread, delicious 
home-made candies are displayed. Luncheons for auto 
parties are a feature. The Fernery makes a specialty of 
its lobster salad sandwiches. Lunches are. delivered at a 
slight extra expense. Sightseers in historic Salem. find 
in the 2 nein a convenient and cozy place to oi and 
rest. 
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