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Vc 1. XII 
gy SOCIETY NOTES 
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“Da 
: 
His Excellency Dr. Constantine Dumba, Austro- 
c Jungarian Ambassador to this country, will conclude 
-season’s stay at Manchester the last of next week and 
the embassy will be removed to Washington on the 
twenty-fourth of October. The embassy’s stay on the 
‘North Shore has been a little longer than usually, one 
reason for this being the lateness of Madame Dumba’s 
‘return from Austria. She is coming over on a Dutch 
Jiner and ordinarilly would have reached here by now, 
“twenty-fourth. She has been spending the spring and 
summer in Vienna and at the Dumba country estate out- 
‘side of Vienna, whither the Ambassador intended to go 
establishing his staff in Manchester for the summer. 
_ The outbreak of the war, however, caused a very sudden 
change in the plans and he has remained here all sum- 
mer. Baron von Suderhorst Zwiedinek and family, who 
have had the Brown cottage, on School st., Manchester, 
will leave for eee gtor the sae of October. 
* 
[7 Mr. and Mrs. Samuel A. Culbertson, of Louisville, 
 Ky., who have been at their Manchester Cove estate all 
summer, closed their cottage Monday. 
z o38 09 
Miss Fanny Faulkner closed her Magnolia cottage 
last week, returning to her town house, Boston, for the 
winter season. 
o2.9 
: Mrs. Hall McAllister fet her daughter, Miss Louise 
McAllister have returned to Boston for the winter. They 
hhave been with Mrs. Boylslton A. Beal at Manchester 
since July. 
> o8 O 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Gannett will have the 
‘Beacon street house of the Draper family (Mrs. Gannett 
was Dorothy Draper) at 150 Beacon street this winter. 
They will not go to Boston until late in the month, 
hwever, as they want to note the progress which is being 
made on their new cottage on Blossom Lane, started some 
weeks ago. 
o 28 9 
Mrs. H. J. McGowan, who with her daughters has 
had the Tenney cottage at Manchester Cove this season, 
- returned to Indianapolis last week. 
Mrs. S. Reed Anthorny of the Beverly Farms colony 
will move to Boston for the winter the latter part of the 
month. She will occupy the James Lowell Putnam house 
on Beacon street instead of her own Commonwealth ave- 
nue home this year. Mrs. Anthony has been among the 
first to subscribe to the Saturday morning lectures at Ford 
hall, which will open October 24. 
Only thoroughly trained 
competent servants (male 
or female) supplied. Re- 
ferences personally and care- 
- fully investigated. .. .. 
NORTH SHORE 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, October 16, 1914 
but it is thought the ship will reach New York about the , 
MISS WILD 
Registry Office 
BREEZE 
No. 42 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Miss Mabel T. Boardman has sent her congratula- 
tions to the Red Cross Benefit Committee for the success 
of the benefit and sale at Mrs. R. S. Bradley’s, Pride’s 
Crossing, last week. Her letter is as follows: “Congratu- 
lations to Red Cross Benefit Committee for great success, 
and many grateful Red Cross thanks to all who aided. 
There will be many thanks also, even if you do not hear 
them, from those whose pain and suffering you have 
lessened—Mabel T. Bardman, Washington.” It is grati- 
fying to learn that the receipts from the sale last week 
have now grown to $3,400. 
o2 O 
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison K. Caner returned last Satur- 
day from a week’s motor trip to the Berkshires. They 
are to keep their cottage at Manchester open until the 
first of November—later than usual. Two of their sons 
are in Harvard, which is responsible in a measure for 
their lateness in returning to ane for the winter. 
oO 2 
The Misses Amy and Clara Curtis have closed their 
cottage at Manchester Cove and sailed yesterday from 
New York to spend the winter abroad, as usual. 
o 8 
The Charles W. Wards, who are settled at their 
town residence, 67 Colchester st., Brookline, after a sum- 
mer in New Hampshire, have been spending week-ends 
at their Manchester cottage all the autumn. 
o 8° 
Mrs. George Dudley Howe closed her North Shore 
establishment at Smith’s Point, Manchester, yesterday and 
returned to her Boston home at 265 Commonwealth ave- 
nue. Her sister-in-law, Mrs. James Howe, who has been 
with her during the latter part of the season, returned to 
Boston with her. 
o 8 O° 
North Shore people will be interested to know of 
the engagement of Miss Edith Norman Hunter, daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Hunter and Louis Lorillard, 
both of Newport, which was recently announced at the 
home of the latter’s uncle, Senator R. L. Beeckman, at 
Newport. Miss Hunter is a season’s debutante attractive 
and much sought after. Mrs. Frederick H. Prince of 
the Hamilton summer colony is her aunt. Mr. Lorillard 
is a Yale man and a member of several prominent yacht- 
ing clubs. He is at present at Geneva with his mother, 
who is ill. 
Oo 8 
Saturday, November 14, has been the date settled up- 
on for the wedding of Miss Mary Lawrence and Stephen 
W. Sabine. Miss Lawrence is the second daughter. of 
Mr. and Mrs. John Lawrence of Groton and Nahant, 
where they have a charming place on Nahant Road. 
Special Attention Given 
to Out-of-Town Orders. 
30S Fifth Ave., N. E. Gor. 3ist., N. Y. 
Telephones 8822, 8823 Madison Square 
