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April 28, 1915 
Miss Gertrude Livingston Amory, only daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. Harcourt Amory of Beacon st., Boston, 
and Pride’s Crossing, with a maid of honor and six 
bridesmaids attending her in pale green and yellow, was 
married in Trinity Church, Boston, Saturday noon by 
Bishop Lawrence, assisted by Rev. Alexander Mann, D. 
D., rector of Trinity, to Constantine Hutchins, Harvard 
’o5, elder son of Mr. and Mrs. Constantine F. Hutchins 
of Boston. The bride wore white satin, with full train 
and trimmed with lace. Her lace veil was caught up 
with a cluster of orange blossoms. Her cousin, Miss 
Mary Copley Amory was maid of honor. The six 
bridesmaids included Miss Mary Hunnewell, Miss Alice 
Wesselhoeft, Miss Laura Amory, Miss Caroline Fessen- 
‘den, Miss Grace Lockwood and Miss Dorothy Thatcher. 
Mr. Hutchins’ best man was Francis W. Sargent, Jr., 
Harvard ’o7. Mr. Hutchins was best man for Mr, 
Sargent when the latter married Miss Margery Lee last 
September. The ushers included Harcourt Amory, Jr., 
and John S$. Amory, brothers of the bride; Davis Hutch- 
ins, the bridegroom’s brother; I. Tucker Burr, Jr., 
Morris Gray, Jr., Thomas G. Gannett, Gordon Fair- 
child, Robert Grant, Jr., Gorham Brooks, Augustus 
Hemenway, Jr., Robert Winsor, Jr., and Eliot Farley, 
all of Boston, with Robert H. Cox and Trowbridge 
Callaway of New York, who were classmates of Mr. 
Hutchins in college. A reception and wedding break- 
fast followed at the Amory residence. Mr. and Mrs. 
Hutchins will live in Dedham. 
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Mrs. Henry S. Grew (Ethel Hooper) of 254 Marl- 
boro st., Boston, and West Manchester, will be in charge 
of the Saturday evening dancing class next year at the 
Hotel Somerset, the members of which will be the debu- 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 11 
held on Jan. 8, 1916, and the subsequent dates are Feb. 
12, Feb. 26, March 11 and the closing date, March 25, 
on which the winding-up ball will be given in the large 
ballroom. 
PAINT PREDOMINATES . 
The usual spring inclination to clean-up and  paint- 
up is now evident in every direction from Lynn to Rock- 
port. The spirit prevails annually during April, May 
and June, all along the North Shore and this season 
seems to surpass its predecessors in pruning, planting, 
cleaning and painting, the main incentive of which is 
undoubtedly the anticipation of new patrons and guests 
who have hitherto forgotten or ignored the quiet com- 
forts and serene splendors of the North Atlantic shore 
resorts, and gone abroad, a wearisome journey: that a 
sense of prudence now forestalls, or possibly precludes, 
or positively forbids. 
Reverting to the contemplation of spruce-up and 
paint-up season, one’s thoughts naturally become asso- 
ciated with the revelry of colors and qualities. The 
California Expositions appear to have established the 
fashion of lively hues, or vivid shades with harmonious 
effects that are a tonic to one’s visual faculties.. There 
are now 212 different tints all of which have names, that 
are recognized by color experts—and paint manufac- 
turers rank next to textile manufacturers in their respec- 
tive varieties of production—a statement that was very 
lately vouched for by one of the enterprising sales man- 
agers of the Wadsworth-Howland Company, Incorpor- 
ated, who recently moved into their new store at 139 and 
141 Federal street, Boston, still retaining, the old stand 
at 82 and 84 Washington street for the convenience of 
patrons who pass daily to and from the North Station. 
tantes of the following year. The first class will be —F..M. C. 
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PRESENTED BY of advertisements and reading notices. Z 
THAT The North Shore Breeze feels honored and proud to be welcomed Y 
into the homes of hundreds of the richest and best known people of the Z 
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in the Breeze for the next six months. 
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W. H. Lerned & Sons, the well-known dealers in Butter, Cheese and Eggs, of Faneuil Hall Market, 
Boston, are looking for retail as well as wholesale trade along the North Shore this summer, and 
they think they can best acquaint North Shore people with that fact by taking a quarter page space 
DOES THIS SUGGEST ANYTHING TO YOU, MR. BUSINESS MAN? 
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