NOR THESHORieBREEZE, 
society Hotes 
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Whitehouse 
went over to New York from their Man- 
chester estate yesterday preparatory to 
sailing next week for Europe, where they 
will spend the summer motoring. Their 
house on the shore will not be occupied 
until their return in late summer. Mr. 
and Mrs. Whitehouse had a small party 
of friends down over the week-end, in- 
cluding N. W. Brooks of New York 
and Allison V. Armour of Chicago. 
Congressman Gardner has bought a 
residence in Washington. It is on H 
street, between 18th and 19th streets, 
which is fashionable, but not so ultra 
fashionable as Mass. avenue. 
The Fred R. Browns of Boston will 
occupy the Geo. Lee house, formerly 
known as the old Boardman estate, at 
Beverly Farms, the coming season. 
No recent announcement of an en- 
gagment has so surprised Bostonians as 
that of Reginald C. Robbins and Miss 
Jane Hall. The young people first met 
on board the Bluecher, which arrived in 
New York Sunday week, after a month’s 
cruise to Panama and the West Indies. 
Miss Hall is a New York girl. Mr. 
Robbins is a son of the late Mr. and 
Mrs. Royal Robbins of Pride’s Crossing. 
He bought the A. L. Devens estate at 
Hamilton two years ago when the family 
estate at Pride’s Crossing was sold to 
Mr. Ayer. He is a brother of Mrs. 
John Caswell of Pride’s and of Miss 
Phyllis Robbins. 
Miss Frances H. Stearns, who has 
been in Europe since the early part of 
February, and who has visited Naples, 
Genoa, Venice and Monte Carlo, St. 
Raphael and more recently Sicily, is ex- 
pected to arrive in New York today on 
the ‘‘Amerika,’’ and after a few days she 
will come over to her villa at Magnolia, 
where she will spend most of her time 
until summer. Miss Stearns no doubt 
is returning with all the latest and swell- 
est ideas in cooking and serving for the 
North Shore Grille club which will be 
open in the early summer and which will 
be even more popular than last year as a 
center forthe most fastidious of the North 
Shore smart set. During her trip aboard 
Miss Stearns had no end of invitations to 
the best things, the most prized of which, 
no doubt, was a special invitation to visit 
the garden of the Baroness Alice de 
Rothschild in Grasse, which is by far one 
of the most noted show places of all Eu- 
rope. The garden is the largest and 
finest in the world. _ It is built in terraces 
on one side of a high mountain and no 
flower or shrub that ever grew is lacking 
here. Most of the monarchs and titled 
people of the world have planted trees or 
shrubs there, but the Baroness has de- 
signed it all herself. The distance around 
the garden is twelve miles, which gives 
one an idea of its extent. 
oS 
Copyright 1907 Copyright 1907 
ay Th 
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House of Kuppe..heimer House of Kuppenheimer 
icago Chicago 
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Field & Kennedy 
iS Bie 7 ale ye 
