June 2, 1916. 
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FRANCIS G. ROSS, A. B., Harvard, 1914 
Summer Address: Address until June 10: Holderness 
8 High St., Ipswich, Mass. School, Plymouth, N. H. 
At present an Instructor in Holderness 
CHICAGO during convention week will prove a magnet 
for persons prominent socially, and many of ‘the 
North Shore residents will be found among the throngs 
at the meetings of the week. A number of dinner par- 
ties will precede the convention ball and garden party to 
be given by the Chicago Equal Suffrage association on 
Tuesday evening, June 6, at the residence of Mr. and 
Mrs. Harold Fowler McCormick in honor of the dis- 
tinguished visitors to the convention. Mr. and Mrs. 
Arthur Meeker will give a dinner for their house party 
of guests whom they will take to the ball. Mr. and Mrs. 
Medill McCormick will give a dinner in honor of Mr. and 
Mrs. Nicholas Longworth. Mrs. John Borden will ea- 
tertain and Judge and Mrs. J. M. Dickinson will give a 
dinner for Mr. and Mrs. Larz Anderson of Boston. On 
June 8, Mr. and Mrs. George Higginson give a dinner 
for Major Henry Higginson of Boston and their other 
house guests. The R. T. Crane, Jrs., will not be in Chic- 
ago and their intended guests, the Cornelius Vanderbilts 
of New York, will be with a large party of friends at the 
Blackstone. 
The largest dinner given the evening before the ball 
will be by Mrs. Cyrus H. McCormick. She is to enter- 
tain a hundred women at her residence in Fast Huron 
street. Many of her guests will be visiting suffragists 
and wives of convention delegates and republican leaders. 
It will be an unique and interesting affair. Women ave 
learning the art of dining together and giving to such din- 
ners the same significance and brilliancy as inheres to 
men’s dinners. 
The convention ball in the McCormick gardens is to 
be a Hindoo fete. There will be a big yellow tent for 
supper and another one for dancing and music. The 
lights will glow, not through the conventional Chinese 
lanterns, but through what will look like big, translucent 
oranges. 
One of the striking features of the suffrage parade 
will be “the wedge,” an imposing arrangement of stunning 
looking women with Mrs. Hobart Chatfield-Taylor at the 
H. P. Woodbury & Son, 
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head of the wedge. Behind her will, be two women. ~ Be- 
hind these three, and so on. In the wedge will be Mrs. 
Lawrence Armour, Mrs. James Ward Thorn, ‘Mrs. Geo. 
Higginson and many others. 
Among other notables present will be. Mr. and. Mrs. 
Larz Anderson, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Mrs. Mar- 
shall Field, Countess Gizycka,- who has many North 
Shore friends, Robert Grant, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John 
Hays Hammond and Mr. and Mrs. John Newbold. From 
Washington will be many interesting women. 
Mrs. Henry C. Corbin, who in 1908 headed a group 
of ten prominent women of society contributing $10,000 
to the general fund in Mr. Taft’s:campaign for the. Presi- 
dency, again will go to Chicago for the nominating: con- 
vention. Mrs. Corbin’s sisters, the Misses Mary’ FE: and 
Josephine B. Patten, will be with her. 3 
NAHANT—Mrs, Thomas Dwight, widow of the ‘late 
Dr. Thomas Dwight, of 235 Beacon st., Boston, and 
Nahant, has the sympathy of her many friends in the 
loss of her daughter, Sister Mary Philip, of the Notre 
Dame Convent, who died suddenly last Sunday week at 
Andover, where the order has been recently established. 
Miss Veronica Dwight of 73 Beacon st., Boston, is an 
aunt of Sister Mary Philip. Miss Margaret Dwight is a 
sister and Joseph Dwight a brother. Sister Mary Philip 
entered the order in Germany about three years ago: 
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Mr. and Mrs. Homer B. Richardson and Mrs. Rich- 
ardson’s daughter, Miss M. Frances Clark, a debutante of 
this winter, will go to Nahant June 6 for the season and 
will occupy the Dabney villa. 
Ores nd ' F 
Mr. and Mrs. Leverett Saltonstall ‘Tuckerman of 9 
Hereford st., Boston, are at their Nahant home for the 
season. 
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