June 2,:1916. 
LL of the old friends and patrons of the little Wenhain~ 
- Tea House, “Sign of the Tabby Cat and the Tea Ket- 
tle,’ will be pleased to know that they will only have to 
go just around the corner from the old house to find the 
newest and most interesting tea room and woman’s ex- 
change in New Lngland. The Wenham Village Improve- 
iment Society with its efficient corps of workers, led by ts 
popular president, Miss Helen C. Burnham, has. toile-i 
unceasingly the past winter to bring to as near perfection 
as is possible this new house, which has every ‘convenience 
nd many unique and attractive features. As you entei 
the Tea Room you find a large room with a simple Col- 
onial fireplace. At one end of the room is the Woman's 
Exchange with its quaint little glass cases and closets, 
which ‘will hold many types of woman’s work, of a hign 
standard. At the other.end is a glass enclosed room ‘o 
be used for card or luncheon parties. Doors lead into a 
large screened porch where those who prefer to be out of 
doors can be served. The artistic frieze, which has been 
painted by a well known artist, is alone worth going ‘) 
cee. The Society is pleased to welcome its friends, oid 
and new, to tais social centre. The opening date is set 
for Monday, June Io. 
o 2 5 y 
“Faglehead,” the beautiful summer estate of Mrs. 
James McMillan of Washington, has been opened for the 
season. Mrs. McMillan herself will arrive within a few 
days. 
33 
George Nixon Black and Chas. B. Pitman, 57 Beacon 
st., Boston, are among the week’s arrivals at Manchester. 
$3 
Mr. and Mrs. Alenuider 8. Porter, Jf.,. came: to 
Manchester Memorial Day and left their two little chil- 
dren with the latter’s mother, Mrs. Edward Wiggles- 
worth, while they are on a visit to their new summer 
hore at Brooklin, Me. Mrs. Wigglesworth will leave 
Manchester in July,,as usual, for her mountain home at 
Jackson, N. H. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 19. 
PROTWITHSTANDING the long procession of wet 
dings planned for the near. future, one already hears 
of important events of this description arranged for the 
early autumn. _ Among them none seens to. be more in- 
teresting than that .of Miss Marie Dallas Agassiz, elder 
daughter. of Mr. and Mrs. Rodolphe M. Agassiz, and 
Cornelius, Conway Felton of Philadelphia, which will be 
celebrated in September at the country home of the 
bride’s parents at Hamilton. Miss Agassiz, as everyone 
knows, was one of the most admired and_ successful 
debutantes’ of two or three winters ago, making her bow 
at a brilliant dance given by her uncle, Maximilian Agas- 
siz, at the Copley-Plaza, Boston: ‘The young girl is ex- 
tremely attractive, having much of the good: looks and 
delightful personality of her mother, who as Marie Scott 
of Philadelphia was considered among’ the most beautiful 
girls of her year. Sister-debutantes of Miss Agassiz are 
wirs. Junius S. Morgan, Jr. (Louise Converse), Mrs. 
Augustus .S. Cobb (Christine Converse), Mrs. Benjamia 
Edwards Cole, 2d (Nancy Sheafe), Miss Phyllis Sears, 
whose marraige to Bayard Tuckerman will be an im- 
portant event of the near future, and the Misses Sophia 
Beyland, Edith Sigourney, Corinna Searle, Ruth Cheney, 
Martha Thorndike, Sabra Batchelder, Charlotte Baylies, 
Helen Draper and scores more of that set. Mr. Felton 
will be graduated from Harvard ‘in: June, and’ ranks 
among the prominent athletes of the college. Mr. Fel- 
ton’s brother, Samuel M. Felton, 3d, married Anne 
Nelson several years ago, and now resides on Brimmer 
st., Boston 
Oo 89 
A. C. Burrage, Jr., and family are established in the 
S. Parker ‘Bremer home, on the tip end of Smith’s Point, 
Manchester, for the summer. They arrived. Wednesday 
from their farm on the South Shore. 
Oo 8 oO. 
Mrs. Geo. D. Howe opened her house at Smith’s 
Point, Manchester, Thursday. 
“IN PLEASANT, WEATHER,’ TRANQUIL STUDY OF THE SEA BY C. CALUSD 
