20 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder July 2, 1915. 
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NAVY FESTIVAL 
IN AID OF 
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Z ON THE HAVEN ESTATE, BEVERLY Y 
ZY FARMS Y 
] WEDNESDAY, JULY 21 j 
j 11 A.M. TO 10 P.M. ] 
Z (NEXT DAY IF STORMY) j 
Uj sooths with all kinds of things to buy j 
Y Exhibition Drills in the afternoon by Marines Y 
j Bluejackets from the battleships New Jersey 
U and Rhode Island 
yj Music by two Marine Bands Z 
Tea and Dancing at 4.30 
Z.- Cabaret and Dancing at 8.30 
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N hey presence of hundreds i metinees of society from 
Philadelphia, New York, Boston and Washington, 
Miss Marie Louise Wanamaker, daughter of Rodman 
Wanamaker and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. John 
was married to Gurnee 
Charles A. Munn, of Washington 
and Manchester. The Rev. John W. Williams, rector of 
All Saints’ Church, performed the ceremony at noon 
Monday in St. Mark’s Protestant Episcopal church. Fol- 
lowing it there was a reception and breakfast at Linden- 
hurst, the country place of Mr. and Mrs. John Wana- 
maker near Jenkintown. Perfect arrangements had 
been made for the wedding, which was one of the most 
notable ever celebrated in Philadelphia. Gifts of infinite 
rariety and of great value were received by the bridal 
couple, among them a silver service of more than five 
hundred pieces from the bride’s father... The bride and 
bridegroom were particulary interested also in a gift 
from the President of the United States. Mr. Wilson 
sent a gold and amethyst pin. Miss Wanamaker, who 
was a debutante of the season just closing, was beautiful 
as a bride. Her attendants also might have been chosen 
for their good looks, for it was said St. Mark’s has sel- 
dom seen a prettier group. Mr. Munn was attended 
best man by his brother, Charles A. Munn, who married 
Miss: Mary Astor ‘Paul several years ago. Miss Wana- 
maker had 
Wanamaker, of Philadelphia, 
Munn, son of Mrs. 
her sister, Mrs. Arturo DeHeeren, and her 
cousin, Miss Mary Brown Warburton, as her principal 
attendants. Mrs. DeHeeren, before her marriage which 
took place abroad, was Miss Fernanda Wanamaker. The 
bridesmaids were Miss Katherine H. Kremer, Miss Ed- 
wina Elkins Bruner, Miss Margaret Berwind, Miss 
Gretchen Clay and Miss Mary Alice Clay, of Philadel- 
phia, and. Miss Frances Moore, of Washington and 
Pride’s Crossing, The ushers were Ector O. Munn and 
THE FOLK HANDICRAFTS 
of the Denison House, Boston 
will hold an 
Exhibition and Sale 
At the residence of Mrs. Sipnry E. Hepcrs 
Fort Hill Ave., Eastern Point, GLOUCESTER 
Tuesday and Wednesday, July 6 and 7 
Automobiles will meet the trolley at Rocky Neck 
from 11 o'clock in the morning, he 1 o'clock ; and 
from 2 o'clock to 5 p.1 
Our New and Capacious 
STORAGE VAULTS 
the latest protective 
insure absolute safety for 
storage purposes, and are . especially 
convenient for North Shore 
SUMMER: RESIDE iii 
Gloucester Safe Deposit & Trust 
Company 
Gloucester, Mass. 
with 
equipped 
devices, 
W. Lee Gwinne, Washington; Reginald Boardman, Man- 
chester; Charles Amory, Q. A. Shaw McKean, Burreil 
R. Huff and Alfred S. Dabney, all of Beverly Farms ex- 
cept Mr. Huff; William Rhinelander Stewart and Ham- 
ilton Fish, Jr., New York, and John K. Mohr and John 
Wanamaker, Jr., a brother of the bride, Philadelphia. 
The flower girl and page were Pauline Munn, niece of 
the bridegroom, and Rodman Arturo de Heeren, nephew 
of the bride. The bride’s gown came from London, as 
did the wedding cake, which was four and a half feet 
high and thirty inches in diameter at the base. — Both 
were brought from England by the bride’s brother, who 
arrived in this country last Friday. Another gown had 
been prepared in this country in the event of some acci- 
dent happening to the imported costume. Mr. and Mrs. 
Munn are to spend most of the summer on the North 
Shore. 
Oo 8 9 
Miss Nelson, Inc., of 298 Boylston st., Boston, has 
opened a shop in the Library Building, Magnolia, where 
she will display the very latest ideas in Women’s wear- 
ing apparel. The gowns are her own original creations. 
The shop is most artistically decorated, and no doubt will 
be well patronized by North Shore residents. adwv. 
Oo 4 O : 
Among those entertaining at The Sign of the Crane 
tea house in Manchester the past week were Mr. and 
Mrs. C. R. O’Bron of New Bedford, who gave a lun- 
cheon; Miss Helen B. Kell of Dayton, O., luncheon for 
five; R. M. Young of Anderson, Ind., luncheon for auto 
party; Miss Alice Jouveau Du Breuil of Washington a 
luncheon for five; Nathaniel Heath of Swampscott, lun- 
cheon for three guests. A great many of the parties en- 
tertained were people passing through on their way to 
summer homes in Maine or in the mountains, 
