18: NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
The Si C 
Che Sign of the Craur 
SUMMER STREET MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
Will Open Saturday, June 17th 
Luncheon and Afternoon Tea 
Cnicken Dinners to Order Telephone 5 
THe second North Shore wedding this season was that 
of Miss Josephine Rantoul and Henry Alexander 
Murray, Jr.,.of New York, which took place Tuesday 
noon in: St. John’s Episcopal Church, Beverly Farms. 
The interior. of the little church was beautifully decorated 
with early summer blossoms, white lilacs and pink peonies 
being used in quantities with beautiful effect. Miss Ran- 
toul is the elder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Neal Rantoul, 
whose Boston home is at 30 Fairfield street, and who 
have a seashore home at Beverly Farms. She is a mem- 
ber of the 1913 Sewing Circle and was presented at a 
ball at the Copley-Plaza three seasons ago. Mr. Murray 
is a Harvard ’15 man, and a son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry 
Alexander. Murray of New York, who have a summer 
home at, the Thousand Islands. 
Two clergymen conducted the ceremony, Rev. Endi- 
cott Peabody, D. D., headmaster of Groton School, and 
Rev. Neilson Poe Carey, rector of the parish. The bride, 
who was given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of 
white. satin with touches of real old lace. Her veil of 
tulle was fastened with a spray of orange blossoms, and 
her bouquet was of lilies of the valley. Her bridesmaids 
were Miss Eleanor Rantoul, Miss Olivia Ames, Miss 
Elaine Denégre, Miss Natalie Thayer, Miss Caroline Fes- 
senden,; ‘Miss Elizabeth DeFord and Miss Cornelia Fiske. 
They wore white muslin. with pink hats of tulle, and 
carried large clusters of pink roses. 
Mr. Murray had for his best man, his brother, Cecil 
Dunmore Murray of the Harvard class of ’16. The ushers 
were David Percy Morgan, Jr., Joseph Walker, 3d.,-and 
John King Hodges of New York; Robert H. I. Gammell 
of Providence, R. I.; Bernard Shirley Carter of Cam- 
bridge; Robert C.. Cobb and Henry De Ford, Jr., of 
Brookline; T. Jefferson Coolidge, 3d., Lawrence Hemen- 
way, Frederick..J.. Bradlee, Jr., Samuel. K. Lothrop, 
Charles A. Coolidge, Jr., and Paul G. Courtney of Bos- 
ten; Bartlett Harwood of Newton, and Franklin Trum- 
bull and Walter H. Trumbull, Jr., of Salem. 
Following the ceremony there was a reception at Mr. 
Rantoul’s seashore home in West street, where the bride 
and bridegroom received against an artistic background 
of blue larkspur. -The future home of Mr. and Mrs. 
Murray will be 129-East Sixty-Ninth street, New York 
city. 
os 
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Culbertson of Louisville, Ky., 
are among; the late arrivals at Manchester Cove. 
Oo . 
Mr. and. Mrs. Quincy A. Shaw,°2d (Naneen Mit- 
chell), and family are settled at their country home in 
Beverly Farms for the summer,: after a winter at their 
farm in Virginia... Mr. Shaw’has been playing polo at 
Long Island the past week. 
: ec ng 
For a generation the fashion center of Boston has 
pointed inthe direction of Driscoll’s, 715 Boylston st. 
Their showing of the season’s latest styles in gowns, mil- 
linery, sport clothes, suits,sweaters, etc., is always a mar- 
vel to the fashion and style seeker. North Shore people 
are only an hour’s ride by motor from Driscoll’s which 
is located on Boylston st., just across from the Hotel 
Lenox, 
The “ORANA”’ $3.00 HAT SHOP 
1122 Lawrence Building 149 Tremont Street, Boston: 
Smart dashing good looking hats; no two alike; 
dressy hats our specialty. 
MISS A. ORR 
Tel. Oxferd 2668-M 
Miss Mary F. Bartlett will occupy her summer home, 
“Stone Lea” at Old Neck, Manchester-by-the-Sea, . next 
Monday. She has been with her brother, Nelson S. Barz- 
lett, Esq., at Manchester for nearly three weeks, since 
closing her Boston residence, 227 Commonwealth ave. 
“Stone Lea” is one of the finest old places on the Man- 
chester shore, with its beautiful old fashioned gardens, 
famous for its wonderful roses, cultured under the per- 
sonal supervision of Miss Bartlett. 
ape OH. +4 
Edmund K. Arnold and family are established at 
their cottage on Old Neck Road, Manchester, for the 
season. 
3} 
Mrs. Henry $. Grew of 89 Beacon street, Boston, 
arrived at her summer home at Old Neck, Manchester, 
yesterday. 
Ad 
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. we ees of Boston opened their 
summer home near the Beverly Farms-Manchester line 
yesterday. Their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. 
Walter Hunnewell, Jr. (Minna Lyman), have the Heaton 
cottage at Beverly Farms this season. 
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Frederick R. Sears and Miss Eleonora R. Sears were 
among the week’s arrivals at Beverly Farms. 
3 
_ Mr. and Mrs. Rodman P. Snelling and daughter, 
Miss Ella del’. Snelling of Needham, will open their 
summer place on the Beverly Farms shore within a few 
days. 
Ghost eget 
John Harvey Wright and family of Boylston st., 
Brookline, have joined the colony at Beverly Farms this 
week. They have the Fenno cottage this season. 
Oo 8.9 
Mrs. Henry C. Weston will close her town residence, 
177 Beacon st., Boston, and remove to Beverly Farms 
early next week. 
o 8 Oo 
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Dobyne of 139 Bay State 
Road, Boston, who are having a beautiful new summer 
place built at Beverly Farms, will spend the summer at 
one of the Oceanside hotel cottages, Magnolia, so as to 
keep in close touch with the work on their hous? and 
grounds. They have bought a portion of the Henry Lee 
estate, near West Beach, and already have started the 
work of construction. 
Oo 8 9 
Mrs. Chas. A. Munn, after a winter in Florida, and 
visits to Washington and Radnor, Pa., with the Chas. A. 
Munn, Jrs., will arrive at her Manchester residence next 
Monday or Tuesday. The Munn home is always tie 
scene of much life, and is the Mecca for the young peo- 
ple, friends of the family. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. 
Munn, Jr. (Mary Astor Paul) and children will be on to 
spend part of the summer. Gurnee Munn and his bride 
of a year ago—Marie Louise -Wanamaker-will al.* 
spend much of the summer at Manchester. The two 
daughters, Mrs. Reginald Boardman and Mrs.°Chas. M. 
Amory live nearby—at West Manchester. 
o 8 0 Lp aes 
E. Palmer Gavit and family of Albany, N. Y., have 
opened the Stevens house on Smith’s Point, Manchester, 
for the season, . 
June 2, 1916. 
