_ Wednesday 
_ They were accompanied by the Hon. 
John Herbert Ward and his 
who is a daughter of the Reids. 
‘4 
, has 
- ear, which he has 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Whitelaw Reid, American Ambas- 
_ sador to the Court of St. James, and 
his wife, who came to this country 
to attend the wedding of their son, 
Ogden Mills Reid, and Miss Helen 
Miles Rogers, at Racine, Wis., sailed 
on the Mauretania. 
wife 
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Na- 
hant and Washington was at Nahant 
last Saturday. 
Mrs. Lucius Tuttle of Boston and 
Magnolia, who suffered a stroke of 
apoplexy on Sunday, passed away at 
her home, 1120 Beacon street, Brook- 
line, Tuesday night. The funeral 
was held Thursday afternoon at the 
family residence. She was _ born 
August 27, 1841, at Norwich, Conn., 
where, as Estelle H. Martin, she 
went through the public schools and 
was graduated at the Norwich Free 
Academy. In 1875 she was married 
to Mr. Tuttle, in Hartford, Conn. 
When Mr. Tuttle became president 
of the Boston & Maine railroad, in 
1893, they came to Boston to live per- 
manently. Besides her husband, who 
recently passed through a 
serious illness, Mrs. Tuttle leaves 
two daughters, Mrs. George W. 
Miller, of Dayton, Ohio, and Mrs. R. 
C. Foster, who had been her 
mother’s companion. For the past 
two summers Mr. Tuttle and his late 
wife occupied the Dakin cottage, 
Western avenue, Magnolia. 
Dr. L. Vernon Briggs, of Boston 
and Manchester, looms high in the 
proposed investigation of the con- 
duct of Massachusetts insane asy- 
lums. He is an alienist of note and 
feels he is justified in calling for re- 
forms. 
E. W. Longfellow of New York 
and Manchester-by-the-Sea has gone 
abroad for a four months’ motoring 
trip through the British Isles and on 
the continent. He is taking his Fiat 
had for three 
years, along with him. 
Ambassador and Mrs. Robert Ba- 
con arrived in New York on Friday 
last from France. They have come 
across to make arrangements for the 
marriage of their son, Robert L. Ba- 
eon, and Miss Cecilia Jacquelyne 
May, youngest daughter of Col. and 
Mrs. Henry May of Washington. 
No date has been set for the 
marriage. The stay of Ambassador 
and Mrs. Bacon in this country is in- 
definite and will be determined by the 
plans that are made for their son’s 
wedding. oc ae 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
TO 
During coronation week in London, 
Mr. and Mrs. John Hays Hammond 
of Washington and Gloucester will oc- 
cupy the magnificent London mansion 
of the late Baroness Burdett-Coutts. 
It is situated in the most exclusive 
residential section. They will have 
some of the most prominent members 
of the nobility as neighbors. 
Lathrop Brown, who is to marry 
Miss Helen Hooper of Boston and 
West Manchester on April 5, gave his 
farewell bachelor dinner at Delmon- 
ico’s in New York on last Friday 
night. His guests were his brother, 
Charles S. Brown Jr., who will be his 
best man, G. Owen Winston, Robert 
B. Minis, Uriel A. Murdock, Charles 
B. Bradley, Herbert C. Dickinson, 
Edward H. Delafield, Elbridge Gerry 
Chadwick, Charles D. Miller, Buell 
Hollister, Alexander D. B. Pratt, 
Alexander Wetherill, Stewart Waller, 
Archibald M. Brown, Malcolm D. 
Sloane, Hayden Channing, Robert 
Sedgwick Jr., Leonce Fuller, John A. 
Dix, Richard H. Williams Jr., F. De- 
lano Roosevelt and Percy R. Pyne 2d. 
Added to the long list of April 
brides is Miss Emeline Ticknor of 
Jamaica Plain, whose engagement to - 
James Melville Hunnewell of Har- 
vard, ’oI1, was announced some time 
ago. The wedding will be in St. 
John’s church, Jamaica Plain, on the 
afternoon of Thursday, April 20, and 
will be largely attended. Miss Tick- 
nor is an attractive, brilliant girl, with 
much distinction of manner, and a 
great favorite. Her sisters are Miss 
Caroline ‘Ticknor, who writes so 
charmingly, and Miss Edith Ticknor, 
and her brothers are William Davis 
Ticknor, who married Ella Wattles of 
Canton several years ago, and Benja- 
min H. Ticknor Jr. The late Howard 
Malcolm Ticknor, the eminent musical 
and dramatic critic, was an uncle. 
Mr. Hunnewell is quite as well placed 
in the world of society as is his fian- 
cee. He is a nephew of Miss Alice 
Farnsworth of the Vendome, Boston, 
of Mr. and Mrs. James Means _ of 
Beacon street, and of Mr. and Mrs. 
William Farnsworth of Beacon street 
and Dedham. Mr. Hunnewell is mak- 
ing an excellent place for himself 
among our younger lawyers and is a 
man of the utmost promise. , Miss 
Ticknor will have no bridesmaids. A 
reception for the immediate families 
will follow the ceremony at the home 
of the bride’s parents. Miss Caroline 
Nicknor annually summers at East 
Gloucester. Mrs. Wm. Davis Tick- 
nor (nee Wattles) spends a portion 
of each summer at Bass Rocks. 
The housewife is known by the 
bread she bakes. 
> ws 
Ro 
SPRING OPENING 
April 4-5-6 
Everything exclusive in 
the Millinery Line. 
Mme. PAULINE 
DESIGNER 
186 ESSEX STREET 
Opp. Gentral 
SALEM, MASS. 
(24) 
A. A. MOORE 
MILLINER 
Announces her Spring 
Millinery Opening week 
of April Ist. 
All the latest Novelties 
in Trimmed Millinery. 
170 Cabot St. 
BEVERLY, MASS. 
(16) 
GotrF ‘ToURNAMEN’'TS AT Essex 
County Cus: 
The invitation tournaments of the 
Essex County Club, Manchester, are 
scheduled July 20-22 and Aug- 
ust 17 to 19. 
Take time to look into every proj- 
ect that is suddenly sprung on you. 
Life’s greatest successes come out of 
the most careful consideration. 
