18 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Women’s Educational and Industrial Union 
Handwork Shop , 
Small Furnishings for 
Country Houses— 
cushions, table runners, 
Shantung tea tables for 
piazza use and muffin 
stands to match 
Supper 
264 BOYLSTON STREET, BOSTON 
Telephone orders taken 
Luncheon 
Afternoon Tea and 
Served at the Union 
The Food Shop 
Cakes and Cookies, 
Candy Kitchen 
Candies 
Basket Luncheons 
prepared 
Opposite Public Garden 
Express connections with North Shore 
(eae GABLES has been quite the thing in North 
circles this week. It is the newest thing Shore society 
to interest society, the newest club—Green Gables Club 
—to open its doors for the elite of the country who are 
gathering here for the summer months. That it has had 
an auspicious ‘‘opening”’ goes without saying when it 
is known that the best of the North Shore’s families are 
members of the club and that they have visited the club 
either on its opening day, Tuesday, or since then to in- 
spect the remodelled building and to take dinner, or 
lunch or tea. Its large open-air dining room in itself 
is enough to attract, but the luxurious and congenial sur- 
roundings of a family motor club offered makes it at 
once a pleasure for North Shore folk at more distant 
points than Magnolia to drop in at the end of a motor 
trip to chat with friends over a cup of tea, at tables over- 
looking the ocean. Several hundred people were at the 
club ‘Tuesday in connection with. its opening. Among 
those noticed were Mr. and Mrs. E. Prescott Rowe, Mr. 
and Mrs. FE. H. Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. H. Swift, Mr. 
and Mrs. Hugh W. Ogden and party of six; J. F. McNeil 
and some Philadelphia friends; Russell S$. Fenn and party ; 
W. F. Watters and party, Geo. A. Dill’ and party. of 
Swampscott; Roland O. Lamb and party of six of Brook- 
line; Capt. Charles W. Littlefield and party of six; Mr. 
and Mrs. Edwards; Walworth Pierce and party of eight; 
Mrs. D. B. Hussey and party of six; Dr. and Mrs. Harry 
Shuman, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Lawrence, Mr. and -Mrs. 
James Brown of Brookline; Perry Dow and party of four 
of Manchester, N. H. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Beal 
motored over from their summer home in Beverly Cove 
last night and dined at the club, giving a little dinner for 
eight, the guests including Mr. and Mrs. William B. 
Walker and Dr. and Mrs. Reginald H. Fitz of West Man- 
chester, and Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Bigelow. They played 
bridge in one of the attractive little side rooms after din- 
ner. Next Monday the club will have a distinguished 
company of gentlemen there for dinner,—the famous 
Atlantic Conference having chosen it as their meeting 
place this year. Hon. A. Shuman, who usually has the 
conference at his summer home in Beverly, is in Europe. 
3 
Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Blake of Boston are the guests 
of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lowell Blake at Pride’s Crossing. 
276 Boylston St. -:- Boston 
Blouses 
Millinery 
W ALSH 
Veils 
Neckwear 
AND AN EXCLUSIVE LINE OF IMPORTED NOVELTIES 
THE WEDDING of Miss Delia Farley Dana and Rob- 
ert Hare Hutchinson at Manchester yesterday was a 
very simple and quiet affair. Miss Dana is the daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Dana of Cambridge and 
Manchester, and Mr. Hutchinson comes from the well 
known family by that name in Philadelphia. At 12.30 the 
ceremony was performed at the Dana summer home at 
Manchester by Alfred S. Jewett, the town clerk of Man- 
chester. Invitations had been sent out for about 100 
guests, mostly from Boston, Philadelphia and Cambridge. 
The house was prettily decorated with laurel and killarney 
roses. ‘There was no music, neither were there any at- 
tendants nor ushers. ‘The bride’s gown was white em- 
broidered crepe without train. She wore no veil. A re- 
ception followed the ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Dana and 
Mr. Hutchinson assisting the young people in receiving. 
Mr. and Mrs. Hutchinson left after the reception for a 
wedding trip to New Zealand, to be gone a year. 
Col. and Mrs. Harry E. Russell of the Manchester 
Cove colony and Mr. Russell’s two neices the Misses Mar- 
garet and Josephine Bates left yesterday for Col. Rus- 
sell’s camp at B Pond, in the Rangeley Lake section for a 
ten days’ fishing trip. 
Riehard Mortimer of Tuxedo, N. Y., will have the 
G. 5. Mandell cottage on Prince street, Beverly, this year. 
Last year Mr. Mortimer had the “Pump Cottage” at 
Beverly Farms for the season. ‘The Mandells are at their 
new estate at Hamilton. 
o 8 
“Highwood,” the beautiful estate of Mr. and Mrs. 
William B. Walker at West Manchester is very charming 
at the present time with its wealth of magnificent flowers 
around the house and here and there about the grounds. 
The paths and drives on the estate, hedged in with beau- 
tiful trees, the gardens and farm buildings, delightful sea 
views and everything that goes to make the place one of 
the most charming on the North Shore is to be found 
here. Mr. and Mrs. Walker make their year-round home 
in Manchester. Their son, Charles C. Walker, who has 
been in Europe on a short holiday is on the water at pres- 
ent and will join his family at West Manchester in a few 
days. 
13 Beach St., Manchester 
Gloves 
Flosiery 
