NOR Irae EO) Rak 
COPYRIGHT BOSTON PHOTO NEWS Co, 
THE attention of society is pivoted the present week 
on the three race days of the Brookline Country 
club—Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. ‘This, together 
with many functions in connection with Harvard Class 
Day and other commencement festivities, has taken many 
North Shore people to town, and tomorrow another big 
event will be the McKean-Lee wedding at the First 
church in Brookline, set for 5.30 in the afternoon. These 
will be about the last of the attractions to keep people 
in Boston and there will be a general exodus of those 
families who have not already settled at their seashore 
homes the coming week. aes 
Among newcomers to Beverly Farms this year are 
Edward B. Alsop and his sons, Harold and Edward, of 
Washington and Pittsburg. They have the Claflin place. 
The two sons are Harvard men. 
Oo 8 
N. S. Simpkins, Jr., returned to Beverly Farms the 
first of the week from Millwood, Va., where he went to 
be an usher last Saturday at the wedding of Miss Nannie 
Nelson and Prescott NED pay Weg 
Miss Mary Shreve Ames of Boston, who has been 
abroad since the late winter and for the past two or three 
years has had a cottage in Newport, has leased the former 
Channing place on University Lane, Manchester, near the 
Lane house, which Miss Rose Dexter is to occupy. Last 
summer Miss Dexter spent paotoring in Europe. 
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes is on one of his cus- 
tomary summer trips abroad before settling at his summer 
cottage at Beverly Farms for the season. 
BREEZE and Reminder 21 
RACING AT THE BROOKLINE COUNTRY CLUB 
Pp OLO was the big star in the horizon of society last 
week—the international games between the Amer- 
ican and English teams at the Meadowbrook club and 
polo grounds being the attraction. A big contingent went 
over from the North Shore, especially the Myopia Hunt 
club set. Of the Myopia contingent most of them arrived 
in New York Monday and were put up at the St. Regis. 
Thorras E. Proctor had five motor loads of guests, 
who occupied the entire mezzanine floor of the hotel, in- 
cluding 36 bedrooms. In the party were his brothers-in- 
law and sisters, Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Rice and Mr. 
and Mrs. George S. Mandell, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. 
Pierce, the former’s brother-in-law, Commander Ernest 
Pentecost, who is developing into a good polo player him- 
self; Mrs. Herbert Wadsworth and Sumner  Pingree. 
Among other North Shore people noted in the grand 
stand boxes were: Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Prince, F. 
Lothrop Ames, Mr. and Mrs. Rodolphe Agassiz, Black- 
wood Fay, Childs Frick, Quincy A. Shaw, 2d, Frederick 
Ayer, Jr., and Miss Katharine Ayer, Neil Rice and Miss 
Hilda Rice, William H. Moore, Charles L. Appleton and 
Henry C. Frick. 
OBO 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Munn, Jr., Miss Gladys 
Munn, Gurnee and Ector Munn were over to New York 
last week for the polo matches, the party being registered 
at the Ritz-Carlton. Gurnee Munn had been in Chicago 
and joined the party in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Regi- 
nald Boardman (Carrie Munn), who had been on a motor 
trip through the Berkshires. also joined the party for 
part of the week. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Munn did not re- 
turn to Manchester Sunday with the rest, but went on 
to Philadelphia for a week. 
