NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1911. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. Charles A. Munn, Miss Gladys Munn and 
Gurnee Munn of Manchester and Washington, sailed 
fiom New York on the last outward trip of the Lusitania 
for a short European trip. ‘They will be there in time to 
spend a week or so with Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Board- 
man (nee Carrie Munn) before they sail for home, and 
they will probably remain through the coronation festivi- 
ties. On the same ship sailed away Mr. and Mrs. J. 
Grant Forbes of Dover, who will return in time to spend 
part of the summer as usual with Mrs. Forbes’ mother, 
Mrs. R. C. Winthrop at West Manchester; also Mr. and 
Mrs. Walter Denegre of West Manchester, Mr. and Mrs. 
Clarence Moore of Pride’s, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. 5S. 
Spaulding of Pride’s. 
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The wedding of Miss Ethel N. Smith and Richard H. 
Dana, Jr., formerly of Cambridge and Manchester, now 
living in New York, will take place in Grace Church, in 
that city, on Saturday afternoon of this week at 4 o’clock, 
to be followed by a small reception at the home of the Rev. 
and Mrs. Cornelius B. Smith on East Sixty-ninth street. 
Mr. Dana is the oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Dana, 
and a brother of Mrs. Henry Casmir de Rham, 2d, of 
New York, Miss Delia Dana and Henry Wadsworth 
Longfellow Dana, Harvard ’03, and Edmund T. Dana, 
‘og. The bridegroom-elect, who graduated from the uni- 
versity in ’o1, is a member of the Harvard Club in New 
York. He is a promising young architect. 
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Mrs. Hall McAllister and her children will pass the 
summer at Nahant as they did last year. Mrs. McAllis- 
ter’s concerts on the North Shore will take place as usual. 
Miss Louise McAllister spent Faster week in Washington 
with her aunt and uncle, the Hon. and Mrs. Francis G. 
Newlands. The Newlands have a charming house at 
Woodley, formerly the home of President Cleveland. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Preston Gibson sailed from New York 
last Saturday on the Lapland to spend the summer in 
Europe. They will be among the multitude of North 
Shore people to take in the coronation festivities, being 
the guests during the celebration of Mrs. Gibson’s aunt, 
Lady Harrington. 
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The Hon. and Mrs. Andrew J. Peters are receiving 
cengratulations upon the birth of a son Wednesday of 
last week, at their home in Washington. Mrs. Peters 
was Martha Phillips, the younger daughter of Mrs. John 
C. Phillips, at whose home, Moraine Farm, in North Bev- 
erly, the wedding took place very quietly last June. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Boardman have been on from 
their home in Auburn, N. Y., the last fortnight to visit 
the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Lithgow Devens 
at Manchester, and Mrs. Edwin A. Boardman, -Mr. 
PBoardman’s mother, at Beverly Farms. 
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The many friends of Mrs. Charles A. Porter, of 
Boston and Beverly Farms, are sympathizing with her 
on account of the illness which necessitated her being 
taken to the Corey Hill Hospital. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
‘The engagement was announced on Thursday of last 
week by Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Bowditch of 75 Bay State 
Road, Boston, of their second daughter, Miss Rosamond 
Lewditch, and Augustus P. Loring, Jr., son of Mr. and 
Mrs. A. P. Loring of the Pride’s colony. Mr. Loring 
is a Harvard ’o8 man. He represents the Beverly Farms- 
Pride’s section of the city of Beverly on the board of 
aldermen this year and has already announced his candi- 
dacy for one of the three aldermen-at-large next year. 
Ne time has been set for the marriage. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Cochrane of Commonwealth 
avenue, Boston, and Hamilton, who. sailed for Europe 
curing the late winter for an extended automobile trip, 
have been heard from in Rome, where they tarried for 
the Eastern gayeties. ‘The Cochranes, who had previously 
toured Sicily, are to make their way to Florence, and 
thence by easy stages to Paris, whence they will sail for 
heme later in the season. 
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It is of interest to learn that Capt. Ernest H. Pente- 
ccst, who married Marion Peirce of Boston two years 
ago and who now resides there, has been decorated by 
King George. ‘This honor was conferred in appreciation 
cf his long service as a captain in the British mercantile 
marine and from which he retired last year. The Pente- 
costs have an attractive new home in Topsfield. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Vincent Kidder (Madeleine 
Appleton), who left for Mexico shortly after their wed- 
ding in Ipswich last September, have returned and are 
tc make their home in Cambridge, as Mr. Kidder is an 
instructor at Harvard. Mrs. Kidder is the oldest daugh- 
ter of Randolph M. Appleton, who spent part of the 
winter with his son-in-law and daughter. 
£5 EIT 
Mr. and Mrs. Philip McMillan, son and daughter-in- 
law of Mrs. James McMillan of Washington and Man- 
chester, were recently registered at the Winter Palace 
hetel, Luxor, Egypt. ‘They spend a portion of each 
season at Manchester with Mrs. McMillan. 
* * x 
George Nixon Black of Beacon street, Boston, ar- 
rived from his somewhat abbreviated foreign tour on the 
last trip of the Lusitania in New York and will pass the 
summer at his North Shore villa, “Craigside,” at Man- 
chester. 
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Mrs. $. Parkman Blake and daughter, Miss Marion 
1. Blake, of Boston and West Manchester, have gone 
abroad, being passengers on the last outward trip of the 
Cymric. 
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Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Rice of Commonwealth avenue, 
Boston, and Burgess Point, Beverly, and their daughter 
kave returned from a several weeks’ stay in California. 
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Miss Cecilia Beaux of Philadelphia and East Glouces- 
ter, is among those exhibiting paintings at the interna- 
tional “exhibition of the Carnegie institute, Pittsburg, 
which opened this week. 
