10 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
TAKE 
COLONIAL 
LINE 
“TO 
NEW YORK 
Every Stateroom has a Window 
England and New York. 
“The Public be Pleased” 
STUDY YOUR COMFORT AND PLAN YOUR TRIPS BY THIS ROUTE 
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PT Ital tbeebacetnas| UB ce Oe a 
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First-class service, palatio steamers, excellent cuisine, clean, comfortable staterooms. 
5.33 train from So, Station connects with steamer from Providence, at 7 P. M. (daily and Sunday). 
E. RITCHIE, Asst. Gen’! Passenger Agent, 232 Washington St., Boston. 
April 23, 1915 
— 
= 
$2.60 
BOSTON 
NEW YORK 
$2.60 
Via Rail and Boat 
Only independent line between New 
Phone 2788 Fort Hill 
HE picturesque little Unitarian church on Masco- 
nomo street, Manchester, was the scene of the first 
social function of the season last Saturday noon, when 
Miss Katherine Lawrence Putnam, daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. William Lowell Putnam of Boston and Manches- 
ter, was married at high noon to Harvey ‘Hollister 
Bundy, formerly of Grand Rapids, Mich., now private 
secretary at Washington of Chief Justice Oliver Wendell 
Holmes of the United States Supreme Court. The 
bride wore the gown in which her mother was married, 
remodelled: for the present day. The skirt was of satin, 
with flounces of point applique lace, mounted over tulle 
and there was a long court train of cream moire antique. 
The bodice had a V-shaped neck and rather full sleeves 
of tulle. It was enriched with lace and had a girdle of 
moire. The superb veil of ancestral lace, originally worn 
by the bride’s grandmother, was becomingly arranged 
with little clusters of orange blossoms at the sides and 
reached to the hem of the train. Literally from the 
“crown of her head to the sole of her foot” the fetching 
little bride was a mass of exquisite lace. She was at- 
tended by Miss Mary E. Parkman, daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. Henry Parkman of Boston. Under chaperonage 
of Miss Hopin, the bride and Miss Parkman had made 
a journey around the world after Miss Putnam’s debut 
in 1910. Miss Parkman wore a pink taffeta frock and 
black Leghorn sailor hat, faced with pink and trimmed 
with pink roses and broad black velvet streamers. The 
ceremony was performed by the Rev. James H. Ropes 
of Harvard Divinity school. Nathan H. Bundy of 
Norfolk, Va., was best man. George Putnam and Mas- 
ters Bundy and Putnam were ushers for the five or 
six score of relatives and intimate friends that attended 
the wedding. The church was very prettily decorated, 
white ascension lilies and pink rambler roses predom- 
inating, a cluster of white lilies tied with white satin 
ribbon adorning the head of each pew. The chancel 
was filled in with a field of lilies, through which the 
clergyman walked as he met the wedding party. Frank 
O. Nash ‘of Jamaica Plain, organist of ris church, pre- 
sided at the organ and played the wedding march from 
Lohengrin as a processional and Mendelssohn’s wedc ling 
march for the recessional, also giving a concert program 
preceding the ceremony. Foll lowing the ceremony a 
reception was held at the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. 
Putnan at Smith’s Point for which several hundred 
invitations were issued. Mr. and Mrs. McGeorge Bundy 
of Washington, D. C., parents of the groom, assisted 
in receiving. Mr. and Mrs. Bundy left on an afternoon 
train for a wedding trip which will end in Washington, 
Forestry 
Experts 
Box 244, Beverly, 
R. E. Henderson 
Mass. 
D. C., which is to be their home. Among those present 
were President. Lowell of Harvard, the bride’s uncle, 
and her aunt, Miss Amy Lowell, also Mrs. Geo. Putnam, 
her grandmother. 
o 8 SO 
C. Thornton has concluded her winter’s 
and is at her cottage in Magnolia 
Mrs. A. 
stay in Washington, 
for the spring. 
} on Oo 
Miss Grace Monks has returned from visits in 
Providence and New York and is now at “Edgewood,” 
Manchester, making preliminary arrangements for open- 
ing the house the first of May, when “hed mother, Mrs. 
Richard J. Monks will join her. 
OUP vee 
Mrs. Robert Gould Shaw was prevented from com- 
ing to Manchester on Wednesday, with Mrs. Sturgis 
and Mrs. Russell, by an attack of grippe. Mrs. Shaw 
is chairman of the Equal Franchise Commission of Bos- 
ton, of which Mrs. Wm. Sturgis is secretary and Mrs. 
H. E. Russell is treasurer. The Writers Equal Suffrage 
League, of which Miss Louie R. Stanwood is president, 
met at Mrs. Shaw’s Boston house on Tuesday last, when 
Miss Amy Lowell read several of her new poems. 
Oita oe 
Miss Helen Lancashire, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. 
J. H. Lancashire of Manchester, has sailed for Europe, 
where she has gone as a volunteer in the Red Cross ser- 
vice as a nurse. She prepared for this duty by taking 
a course in nursing in New York city. She will: go di- 
rectly to Paris on her arrival on the other side. Dr. and 
Mrs. Lancashire and their family have just come north 
from the Hot Springs, where they have been for most 
of the season, and are in New York. Their house at 
Manchester, in the Dana’s Beach section, is being put 
in readiness for occupancy, and they soon will arrive 
here. 
bo Side Sek ¢ 
There is considerable local interest in the announce- 
ment from New York by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Steele 
of 11 East Sixty-second street of the engagement of 
their daughter, Miss Kathryn N. Steele, to F. Skiddy von 
Stade, a well-known Myopia polo player. Mr. von Stade 
took part in the polo tournaments at the Panama-Pacific 
exposition. He is a son of Frederic von Stade. One 
sister of Miss Steele is the Countess Jean de La Graze, 
who was married in October, 1goo. 
Oo 8 9 
Yearly subscription to North Shore Breeze, $2.00. 
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