NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Vol. XI 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Robert S. Bradley of the Pride’s 
Crossing colony is quite ill at the Eliot 
hospital, Boston, where he was oper- 
ated upon the pe of the week. 
The Amory G. Hodges of New 
York will return to the North Shore 
for the season. They have re-leased 
the Fenno cottage, so-called, at Bev- 
erly Farms. 
o % 
The wedding of Miss Alys Meyer, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George von 
L. Meyer, and Lieut. Raymond Rod- 
gers will take place in St. John’s 
church, Washington, April 25. The 
rector, Rev. Roland Cotton Smith, 
of the Ipswich colony, will officiate. 
A wedding breakfast will follow the 
ceremony, which takes place at noon 
at the Meyers’ Washington home in 
Scott Circle. 
o 
June is the time chosen for the mar- 
riage of Miss Laura M. Maynes to 
Maximilian Agassiz, whose engage- 
ment has just been learned by their 
more intimate friends, a little in ad- 
- vance of the time they intended to 
announce it formally. 
os 
ve 
_ Among the new-comers to Man- 
chester this season, it is said, will be 
Dr. and Mrs. Edward Clark Streeter 
and two young children, of Boston. 
Last year they occupied ‘“Upper- 
cross,” on Asbury street, Topsfield. 
They are said to have leased the 
Peirce house at Old Neck, Manchester, 
for the coming season. heir Boston 
home is at 413 Beacon street. Mrs. 
Streeter was Miss Alice M. Chase. 
oe 
_Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Russell, 
who have been summering in Man- 
chester the past few years, last year 
at the S. V. R. Crosby cottage, West 
Manchester, will go to Pride’s Cross- 
ing this year. They have leased Mrs. 
Daniel Ahl’s cottage, through the 
Boardman agency. The Ahls now 
have a country estate in the Myopia 
Hunt club section. 
NSURANCE 
STRONGEST AND MOST 
RELIABLE COMPANIES 
‘white lilacs and ribbon. 
Manchester, Mass., Friday, April 11, 1913 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The marriage of Miss Elizabeth 
Sears, daughter of Herbert M. Sears 
of Boston and Pride’s Crossing, and 
3ayard Warren, son of Mrs. Samuel 
D. Warren of Boston, took place in 
the Arlington Street church, Boston, 
Tuesday, when the Rev. Paul Revere 
Frothingham officiated. Miss Sears 
made an exquisite bride in her gown 
of white satin, the court train trimmed 
entirely with exquisite point lace. She 
wore a white tulle veil and carried 
valley lilies and orchids. Her only 
ornament was a- beautiful string of 
pearls with diamond ornament. She 
had as her only attendant her sister, 
Miss Phyllis Sears, who looked ex- 
tremely pretty in a gown of pale pink 
satin veiled in the same shade of chif- 
fon and trimmed in pink marabout. 
She wore a cream straw hat with 
trimming of pink feathers and carried 
pale pink orchids. Mr. Sears escorted 
his daughter to the altar, where they 
were met by Mr. Warren and his 
brother, Samuel Warren, who was best 
man. The ushers included Thomas P. 
Curtis, Jr., Percy G. Wendell, Edwin 
D. Morgan, Jr., George C. Cutler, Tr., 
Frederick Parker, Upton Sullivan, 
Montgomery Goodale, Gordon Balch, 
Robert H. Potter, John S. Parker and 
Daniel Sargent. The church was 
handsome in its decorations of quanti- 
ties of rambler roses hanging from 
every pillar from the top and woven 
together with white lilacs. The pews 
were hung in smilax and rambler roses, 
while the entrance of each was tied in 
On the altar 
were hung urns of white lilacs and 
rambler roses. Mr. Warren’s gifts to 
the ushers were diamond and sapphire 
pins. Mrs. Warren, mother of the 
bridegroom, was in  copper-colored 
satin with long coat of cream lace. 
Mrs. Bryce J. Allan, the bride’s aunt, 
was in white satin with cream lace 
coat and wore a cream straw hat with 
champagne feathers and pink roses. 
She wore a rope of diamonds. Mrs. 
P. S. Sears, also an aunt of the bride, 
was in cream chiffon over white satin, 
D. D. Carey 
56 Ames Bidg., Boston 
Telephone 1792 Main 
(With the Boardman Real Est. Agy.) 
No. 15 
SOCIETY NOTES 
The Dr. C. A. Porters will again 
occupy “Apple Orchard” at Beverly 
Farms. 
Oo % 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Sias of 
Boston and Wenham will return this 
month from California, after spend- 
ing about three months there, making 
their headquarters at Pasadena. They 
will open their summer estate at 
Wenham early in the season. 
Philip Stockton of Manchester has 
been playing in the in-door tennis 
tournament, championship of the Uni- 
ted States, at the Tennis and Racquet 
club, Boston, the past week. He was 
defeated in the playing Wednesday. 
OB 9° 
Dr. and Mrs. Marshall Fabyan are 
to return to Beverly Farms for the 
summer, but they are to have a dif- 
ferent cottage than last year. They 
have just leased “Cabot Lane house,” 
so-called. 
Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Warren of Bos- 
ton and their two little daughters, will 
come to Manchester again this su- 
mer, having re-leased the Storer cot- 
tage on Smith’s Point. Mrs. War- 
ren’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wash- 
ington B. Thoras and Miss Margaret 
Thomas, of the Pride’s colony, are on 
a trip around the world. 
o % 
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Waller of Chi- 
cago, who had the Reginald Foster 
cottage at Coolidge’s Point last year. 
have taken it for another season and 
will arrive in early June for the sum- 
mer. 
oO 2 
Mrs. E. C. Swift of the Pride’s 
colony is sailing for abroad on the 
16th of this month. 
with large hat to match. Mr. and 
Mrs. Warren will spend the summer 
at Pride’s Crossing. Mr. Sears re- 
cently bought the Endicott property 
there for them, but they will not oc- 
cupy it this year. 
NORTH SHORE 
PROPERTY 
SPECIALTY 
