NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Vol. X. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, May 10, 1912 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Charles T. Dukelow and family of 
Brookline have changed their plans 
in relation to spending the summer 
at Manchester. They have sublet 
“Wyndhurst,’’ the cottage they 
have leased on Masconomo street. 
Their summer tenant will be Miss 
EK. C. MeVickar of Providence, 
formerly of the Pride’s contingent, 
and a sister of the late Bishop Wm. 
N. MeVickar. Mrs. Dukelow and 
children will spend the summer with 
Mrs. Dukelow’s parents, Mr. and 
Mrs. Dudley B. Wick of Cleveland, 
Ohio, at the Wick country seat 
Wickliffe-on-the-Lake outside of 
Cleveland. Mr. Dukelow will make 
a business and pleasure trip to 
Europe. 
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Mr. and Mrs. F. 8. Chick of Hotel 
Vendome, Boston, have arrived at 
their summer residence on Norman 
avenue, Magnolia, for the season. 
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Enlarging the Manchester cottage 
colony to open summer residences 
this week was Miss Elizabeth D. 
Boardman of Boston, at West Man- 
chester. 
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Count and Countess Moltke (Cor- 
nelia Thayer) gave a dance in 
Washington recently for Miss Helen 
Taft and other young people. 
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Mrs. Oliver Ames, Sr., of Boston, 
has gone to her country home in 
North Easton for the summer. 
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Among those who assisted in re- 
ceiving the guests at the reception 
given in Washington by the Ameri- 
can Red Cross convention were Miss 
Mabel Boardman, secretary, and 
Mrs. George von lL. Meyer, Mrs. 
Winthrop Murray Crane, Mrs. L. Z. 
Leiter and Mrs. Nicholas Long- 
worth. 
New Yorkers to select Pride’s for 
the establishment of their summer 
home this season are the Fulton 
Cuttings and the Gerald L. Hoyts. 
The former family will be domiciled 
at the Thomas Procter cottage and 
the Hoyts at the William Endicott, 
Jr., cottage. Mrs. Hoyt was form- 
erly one of the Boston Appletons. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Boston society was prominently 
represented at the wedding yester- 
day in New York, of Miss Dagmar 
Wetmore, daughter of Mrs. James 
Markoe of New York, and Charles 
S. Sargent, Jr., son of Prof. Charles 
S. Sargent of Harvard University. 
The ceremony was performed at 
Grace church. Among the Bos- 
tonians present were Mrs. S. Van 
Renssalaer Thayer and Mrs. A. 
Lithgow Devens, Jr. 
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Other new members of the Bev- 
erly Cove contingent this season 
will be the William B. Millers of 
Akron, ‘Ohio, in the Francis I. 
Amory cottage; the Randolph Tuck- 
ers of Chestnut Hill, will oceupy. 
Miss Elizabeth Sohier’s cottage and 
the George A. Frosts of Newton 
will have the Amory A. Lawrence 
‘““Wadsworth Cottage’’ at Hospital 
Point. Since Miss Frost became the 
bride of Miles W. Weeks, the past 
winter, the Frost and Weeks fam- 
ilies will be neighbors sinee Mr. 
Weeks’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. War- 
ren B. P. Weeks, have the Clafin 
cottage nearby. 
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The EH. C. Richardsons of Bay 
State road, Boston, are settled for 
the season at their cottage on Nor- 
man avenue, Magnolia. 
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Philadelphia and Newport are 
accepting the tragic death of 
George D. Widener as a forerunner 
of radical changes in the _ future 
plans of Mrs. Widener. Their splen- 
did new mansion at Newport and 
the brilliant season planned there, 
the great wedding plans underway 
for their daughter, Eleanor, and her 
fiancee, Fritz Dixon, have lost all 
value to the bereaved family. There 
is a wide eirele affected by Mr. 
Widener’s death. All entertaining 
at. the Huntingdon Valley Country 
elub, Philadelphia, is given up out 
of respect to Mr. Widener. Mr. and 
Mrs. EK. T. Stotesbury have ecan- 
eeled all their social functions, as 
have many other Quaker City ma- 
trons since the Titanie disaster was 
so far reaching socially and it de- 
manded so much respectful recogni- 
tion. 
No. 19 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Clarence Moore of Washington 
and Pride’s, whose sad and untime- 
ly death resulted from the Titanic 
disaster, and whose body. has not been 
recovered, was one of the best-known 
sportsmen in America. Ile was mas- 
ter of hounds of Chevy Chase Hunt, 
and on his visit to England from 
which he was returning he is said 
to have purchased twenty-five brace 
of hounds from the best packs in 
the north of England. Tis wife is 
Miss Mabelle Swift, daughter of 
the late E. C. Swift of Chicago, 
Washington and Pride’s. Mr. Moore 
was a member of the New York 
Yacht club and the Travellers’ club 
of Paris, besides the Metropolitan, 
the Chevy Chase and the Alibi elubs 
of Washington. Socially he is. one 
of the best-known men in Washing- 
ton. He was born in Clarksburg, 
W. Va., in 1865, and when he fin- 
ished his education in Dufferin 
College in Ontario he interested 
himself in the development of min- 
eral wealth of that state as did the 
late Senator Stephen B. Elkins and 
ITenry Gassaway Davis. Since 1890 
Mr. Moore had hved in Washing- 
ton, having business connections 
with the banking and brokerage 
firm of Hibbs & Co. Mr. Moore’s 
first wife was Alice MeLaughlin, 
daughter of Franklin McLaughlin 
of Philadelphia. She died in 1897, 
leaving two children, Frances Sarah 
Preston and Samuel Preston Moore. 
Ile married Miss Mabelle Swift on 
June 20, 1900. By his second mar- 
riage be has two children, Jasper 
and Clarenee, Jr. 
328 
Lueius M. Cuthbert and family of 
Denver, Colo., who had the Dewart 
cottage, ‘‘Crowhaven,’’ Summer 
street, Manchester, last season will 
enlarge the Smith’s Point, Manches- 
ter colony this season as tenants of 
the Richard M. Bradley cottage. 
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The Longworth estate at Pride’s 
will not be occupied this season by 
that (Cineinnati and Washington 
family of note. It has been rented 
to Clay A. Pierce and family of St. 
Louis, who were at the S. Parker 
Bremer cottage, Smith’s Point, Man- 
chester, last season. 
