Theodore Roosevelt, jr., is a house 
guest of Lawrence Morgan at Manches- 
ter, for a few days. 
Henry Clay Pierce is expected at his 
Pride’s Crossing estate today or tomor- 
row to remain during the autumn. ‘The 
estate has been unoccupied all summer. 
C. S$. Houghton and family are closing 
their summer home on Coolidge’s Point 
the last of next week and are returning 
to their Chestnut Hill, Mass., residence. 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. White- 
house are leaving Manchester tomorrow 
for a two months’ tip to England. 
They plan to return about Thanksgiving 
time. 
Mr. and Mrs. Eben D. Jordan and 
Col. and Mrs. Harry E. Russell left 
Manchester, Tuesday in Mr. Jordan’s 
handsome new 35-45 Renault for a ten 
days’ auto tour of the White Mountains. 
Mr. Jordan bought the car, by the way, 
on his recent trip abroad and it arrived in 
Boston Thursday week, so that this is its 
initial trip. Mr. and Mrs. Jordan are 
not going to the Virginia Hot Springs, as 
reported last week, until later in the 
autumn. Miss Dorothy Jordan is going 
over to her farm at Wenham next week 
to remain part of the autumn. ‘The 
house at West Manchester will be closed 
next Monday. 
At the little Episcopal church on Mas- 
conomo street, Manchester, tomorrow 
(Saturday) afternoon at 3.30 the 
matriage of Miss Alice St. John Nolan 
and Dr. J. Ramsey Hunt will be solem- 
nized. Miss Nolan is the daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Nolan of 
Chicago, whose city home on Drexel 
Boulevard is one of the best known old 
places of the city. The family has 
been spending the summer at the Brown- 
land Cottage, Manchester. Dr. Hunt 
is of 112 West Fifty-fifth street, New 
York city. About 100 wedding guests 
are expected, mostly from out-of-town, 
---Boston, New York, Philadelphia and 
Chicago. Miss Evelyn Hunt of New 
York, sister of the groom, will be the’ 
maid of honor, and Dr. Charles M. C. 
Canac of New York will be best man. 
The bride will be given in marriage by 
her father. Rev. S. 9S. Drury of St. 
Stephen’s church, Boston, will be the 
officiating clergyman. ‘The ushers will 
be Edward J. Whitehouse, Arnold 
Knapp and J. C. Bishop, all of New 
York; Edwin Prieth, brother-in-law of 
tho bride, and H. E. Nolan, her brother. 
The church will be very prettily deco- 
rated for the event, green and white pre- 
dominating. A reception will follow at 
the Bullard Cottage, Manchester, after 
the ceremony at which will be present 
only the intimate friends of the couple. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
The F. M. Luptons, who had the 
Winch cottage at Manchester this sea- 
son, are among the week’s departures. 
‘They have taken up their winter resi- 
dence on St. Mark’s avenue, Brooklyn, 
but plan to sail for Europe about the first 
of February. Their daughter, Mrs. 
Charles Courtney Hoge, and Mr. Hoge, 
who have also spent the summer here 
returned to their home in Hartford, 
Conn., last week. ‘They have devoted 
much of their time to motoring this 
summer, and have found the North 
Shore roads ideal for this vocation. 
An approaching marriage, that will be of 
interest to North Shore summer residents 
and hotel guests at Magnolia, is that of | 
Miss Frances Newlands and Dr. Hugh 
Auchincloss of New York, on ‘Tuesday 
of next week at Franconia, N. H. Dr. 
Auchincloss is well known on the North 
Shore and has been coming to the 
Oceanside hotel, Magnolia, fora num- 
ber of years as have the other members 
of the family. Owing to the illness of 
the prospective bride-groom’s mother, 
Mrs. Edgar S. Auchincloss, only the 
immediate members of the two families 
will be present at the ceremony and there 
will be no reception. Rev. Endicott 
Peabody, recently returned from Euroepe, 
will officiate. 
Senator Beveridge Leaves. 
Senator Albert J. Beveridge, who has 
occupied ths Rockwell cottage at Smith’s 
Point, Manchester, for the past two 
months, left this morning for New York 
City, where he opens the Republican 
campaign tonight at Carnegie hall. The 
DOE! cee 
THE WORTH SHORE TOILET PARLORS 
9 
— 
subject of his speech will be “* Business 
and the Trust.’” “The New York meet- 
ing is the first of a speaking tour which 
has been arranged for Senator Beveridge 
by the Republican National committee, 
and which will extend clear across’ the 
country to the Pacific coast. He speaks 
at Terre Haute, Ind., on ““Labor’’ on 
Sept. 29th, replying to Mr. Bryan, who 
speaks there tonight; and on Oct. 1 he 
speaks at Minneapolis, Minn., on the 
tariff. From Minneapolis an extensive 
campaigning trip, embracing’ the Da- 
kotas, Montana, Idaho, Washington, 
Oregon and California, and returning 
through Colorado, Kansas, Missouri and 
Nebraska, has been mapped out by 
Chairman Dixon, of the Western 
Speakers’ Bureau. The tour willl end 
with a big meeting at Chicago about 
October 17th. Mr. Beveridge has pre- 
pared a series of speeches replying to 
those that Mr. Bryan has thus far  deliv- 
ered, and the itinerary is so arranged 
that he closely follows Mr. Bryan in sev- 
eral western cities. During the year 
1907 a joint debate between Bryan and 
Beveridge, covering practically all the 
issues of the present campaign, was pub- 
lished monthly in a popular magazine. 
His fitness to answer Mr. Bryan’s areu- 
ments has prompted the National Com- 
mittee to send him on the long tour he 
will make. 
Mrs. Beveridge and infant will leave 
Manchester Monday and will go to 
Chicago for a visit with her parents, the 
A. N. Eddys. 
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