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ANOTHER e the foreign Sere will be located 
at Manchester this year, the Italian charge d’ affaires 
having just taken a cottage at Windemere Park, which 
is off School street, quite near the Essex County club. 
The lease was made through the agency of G. E. Will- 
monton. The Austro-Hungarian embassy will move to 
Manchester from Washington the latter part of next week, 
or the second week:in June. The Ambassador, C. Dumba, 
will have the Hood cottage on Norton’s Point , as last 
year, and other members of the embassy will be located 
in the town also. Colville Barclay, ae of the 
British embassy, will come on to the S. P. Bremer cot- 
tage at Manchester the middle oF June. 
co) 33 ° 
Francis L. Higginson and family are now settled at 
their summer home in Pride’s Crossing. The S. E. 
Hutchinsons of Philadelphia are also among the arrivals 
of the week. Their attractive estate adjoining West Beach 
was opened this week, awaiting the arrival of the fam- 
ily the latter part of ee eee 
Mrs. J. Theodore Heard of Louisburg Sq., Boston, 
has just opened her attractive cottage in the Rafe’s Chasm 
section of the Magnolia shore and will be joined later 
by other members of the family. 
3% O° 
Mrs. Robert Dawson Evans of Boston, arrived at 
her summer home, Dawson hall, Burgess Point, Beverly, 
Wednesday, for the season. The Evans estate with its 
beautiful mansion house, out on the tip end of the pic- 
turesque point, its wonderful Italian gardens and the 
broad stretches of lawn is one of the show places of the 
North Shore. Miss Belle Hunt, who is abroad, is ex- 
pected to join Mrs. Evans, her sister, later in the season, 
for the remainder of Bo cy stay. 
33 
‘Mr. and Mrs. George Lee, who are at their summer 
home at Beverly Farms, announced the latter part of last 
week the engagement of their youngest daughter, Miss 
Margery Lee (whom all her friends call ‘“Wee’’), and 
Francis W. Sargent, Jr. Miss Lee was introduced a year 
ago last autumn at a large reception at the Lee home in 
Brookline, where later in the season there were several 
other entertainments in her honor, including a series of 
dinner dances. One of her sister debutantes and most 
intimate friend is Miss Anne Means and both girls were 
presented at the Italian Court last winter when Mrs. Lee 
and her daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Little and 
the latter’s daughters spent the season in Rome. Miss 
Lee’s older sisters, Mrs. Oliver Turner (Marie Lee), and 
Mrs. Henry Pratt McKean, Jr., (Elizabeth Lee), both 
brides of last June, have also been presented to the King 
and Queen of Italy. The third of the four sisters is 
Miss Florence Lee, who cares little for society. She 
devotes much of her time to painting and is an accom- 
plished artist, There is one brother Harry Lee, 
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HE forthcoming marriage of Miss Mary Jospin 
Amory and Fulton Cutting will be among the first 
of the weddings to take place on the North Shore this 
year. The w edding will be at the Amory summer home 
at Beverly Cove the third week in June. 
QO © 
The wedding of Miss Anna F. Wellington and Prof. 
S. Burt Wolbach of the Harvard Medical School will 
take place at the home of the bride’s father, 420 Beacon 
st., Boston, Wednesday evening, June 10, at 8 o'clock. 
Only the relatives and a few intimate friends of the 
couple will be present at the ceremony, which will be 
followed by a large reception at 8:30. Miss Wellington’s 
two brothers will come on for the wedding. One of 
them is a professor at Vermillion University, Vermillion, 
S. D. Mrs. Wellington came on last Sunday to remain 
until after the wedding and was of the family party 
down at the Wellington summer home at Pride’s Cross- 
ing over the week-end. Miss Louise K. Mathews was 
also a guest of Mr. Wellington and his daughter over 
the week-end. She is on from Wisconsin where she is 
dean of Wisconsin University. She chaperoned Miss 
Wellington for two years abroad after the latter had 
completed her studies at Radcliffe. 
> 23 SE 
One of the first of the Oceanside hotel contingent to 
reach Magnolia every year is Mrs. John M. Gilkeson of 
Pasadena, Cal. So alluring is Magnolia and its varied 
attractions Mrs. Gilkeson and companion usually arrive 
several weeks before the hotel proper opens and is domi- 
ciled in one of the smaller inns the first few weeks of 
the season. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Arthur Shuman of Beacon St., 
Boston, and their three children are occupying ‘“Moll- 
hurst,” their summer home at Marblehead Neck, for the 
season. 
O> 893, 
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Codman of Lime st., Boston, 
came down to their cottage at Nahant on Thursday for 
the summer. 
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and Mrs. John Henry Blodgett will spend the 
Bluff after the return from their wed- 
ding trip. The house which they will occupy adjoins 
the summer place of Mrs. Blodgett’s parents, Mr. and 
Mrs. William A. Paine of 409 Commonwealth ave., Bos- 
ton where last Thursday evening the marriage of Miss 
Mr. 
season at Beach 
Paine and Mr. Blodgett. was solemnized by Rev. Willis 
H. Butler, associate minister of the Old South Congrega- 
tional Chirch. Mrs. Blodgett was Miss Ruth Sargent 
Paine. ‘The residence of the young couple at Beach ‘Biff 
was a wedding gift from the bride’s father to his daugh- 
ter and has been entirely remodeled from an old house. 
It is Colonial in style and has a spacious piazza with 
heavy columns and ornamental balustrades, 
