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PITTSBUR G. 
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Many Pittsburg summer colonists of 
the North Shore go to Washington, Feb. 
2, to attend the wedding of John Upsher 
Moorhead and Miss Lillian Chew, both 
former residents of Pittsburg. It will be 
an important social event. 
At a beautifully appointed luncheon 
Jan. 19,.Mrs. Rrownlee H. Hoeveler of 
Fifth avenue, Pittsburg, announced the 
engagement of her daughter to Clay 
Frick Lynch, son of Mr. and Mrs. 
Thomas Lynch of Greensburg, Pa. 
Pittsburg has her auto show in Du- 
quesne Garden, March 26-April 2, and 
the decorations, lighting and music are to 
be of exceptionally high order. 
The Tariff club of Pittsburg of which 
many of the city’s leading citizens are 
members, observe the late Ex.-Pres. 
McKinley’s birthday tomorrow evening 
by a banquet and addresses at Hotel 
Schenley. Prominent men from all over 
the state of Pennsylvania will be present. 
Among the patronesses of the concert 
given by Miss Tillie Koenen, the Dutch 
contralto, in Carnegie Music hall, 
Thursday evening, were Mesdames Her- 
bert Hostetter, John R. McGinley and 
Herbert Du Puy, all well known sum- 
mer residents of Beverly and Manches- 
ater. 
Miss Marion McGinley of Pittsburg 
and Manchester has been in New Haven, 
Ct., for the Yale college ‘‘prom.”’ 
The engagement of Miss Isabel W. 
Pontefract, daughter of Mrs. James G. 
Pontefract of Allegheny, and Mr. Clin- 
ton L. Childs, son of Mr. Harvey L. 
Childs, was announced at a luncheon 
which Mrs. David T. Watson gave 
Tuesday afternoon in Pittsburg. 
BOSTON. 
William Baxter Closson, the artist, 
who has a studio on the corner of Lobs- 
ter lane and Hesperus avenue, Magnolia, 
has opened his Boston studio, 383 Boyls- 
ton street. 
J. A. S. Monks, another North Shore 
artist of the East Gloucester colony, is 
holding an exhibition of landscape paint- 
ings at the Rhode Island school of design 
from Jan. 20 to Jan. 29. 
The New England Kennel Club is 
arranging a show to take place next 
month. Entries close Feb. 2. Prizes 
of money, medals and cups will be of- 
fered. 
Henry Davis Sleeper of Boston and 
Gloucester has opened his charming cot- 
tage at Eastern Point, East Gloucester, 
for a portion of the week as is_ his fre- 
quent custom. 
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Philip Stockton and family, who moved 
to Boston the day that Mrs. Stockton’s 
father died in New York, have moved 
back to Manchester this week and will 
remain here the rest of the season. 
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leland were 
down to their West Manchester estate 
over the week-end, remaining until 
‘Tuesday. 
The resignation of Gen. Carlos Gar- 
cia Velez, Cuban minister to the 
United States has been received. The 
ambassador and family were at Manches- 
ter last summer. 
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Moore of 
Pride’s Crossing are receiving congratu- 
lations on the birth of ason at their home 
in Washington, recently. 
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Norman and their 
daughter, Miss Hope, have started on a 
trip around the world. 
Gordon Abbott will be an usher at the 
marriage in New York, Feb. 8, of Miss 
Electra Havemeyer and James W. 
Webb. 
Mrs. Hall McAllister and children 
will occupy the house of her brother-in- 
law, Gorham Hubbard, 210 Beacon st., 
Boston, for the balance of the season, 
the family having sailed fora trip abroad. 
The will of the late Charles Head of 
Boston and Manchester, leaves the estate 
to his ate wife. Asshe died last April, 
the estate goes to the two daughters, 
Mrs. Philip Stockton and Mrs. Wil- 
liam A. Russeil. Philip Stockton has 
applied for the administration of the es- 
tate. 
The snowshoe division of the Appa- 
lachian Mountain club arrived in Port- 
land, Me., last Saturday after a week’s 
trip in the White Mountains. Among 
the party was Charles A. Reed of Man- 
chester. 
Hon. T. J. Coolidge of Boston and 
Manchester, is now the senior alumus of 
Harvard college, being a member of the 
class of 1838, a distinction held by Rev. 
Dr. Wm. H. Furness of Philadelphia. 
Ex.-President Roosevelt has been made 
the chief executive officer of the Harvard 
Alumni Association of some 19,033 liv- 
ing members. . 
Mrs. Richard Harding Davis, who is 
suing for a divorce from her author-hus- 
band, was resistered at the Masconomo 
House, Manchester, last season. 
The Vincent Club (Boston) show 
this year is to be called ‘‘ Rouge et Noir,”’ 
and its author is Mrs. Thaddeus Defriez 
(Grace Croll.) Several members of the 
club are abroad getting ideas and points 
for incidental features, as the scene of 
the play is Monte Carlo. 
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PHILADELAHIA, 
Miss Arnold, sister of Mrs. Hum- 
phrey Ward, the noted English novelist, 
addressed the Pennsylvania Suffrage 
League of Philadelphia Monday evening 
of this week. A reception was also given 
in her honor. 
Prof. F. G. Speck of the University 
of Pennsylvania, who summered on the 
North Shore last season in a cottage on 
Wolf Hill, Gloucester, has returned from 
a midwinter trip to the interior of Maine 
where he went to study the life of the 
Penobscot Indians. Piof. Speck is a 
member of the faculty in the department 
of ethnology and a great authority on In- 
dian custems having lived in their camps 
all over the country spending many years 
in actual contact withthem. The Specks 
built a new cottage at Riverview, Glou- 
cester, to be occupied by them the com- 
ing summer. 
A social event of interest Wednesday 
of this week was the song recital of Miss 
Flora Wilson, daughter of the U.S. Sec. 
of Agriculture, in the ballroom of the 
Bellevue-Stratford. There was also a 
reception in her honor, Tuesday from 5 
to 7 at the home of Mrs. Florence Fox, 
2128 Spruce street. 
Miss Cintra Hutchinson is a much 
sought for debutante in the exclusive so- 
cial circles of the Quaker City, her name 
constantly appearing in the list of invited 
guests at all the notable functions. 
WeE would be willing to wager that 
there are few towns of the size of Ips- 
wich where an equal amount of work, 
and good work to, has been done by the 
highway department during the past few 
weeks. To be sure ‘it costs a_ little 
money, but the money goes to those who 
need it and at a time when they are not 
able to get other work. ‘The clearing of 
the roads, the breaking out of the walks 
and the carting of the snow from the 
business sections, is equal to the work 
done in many of the large cities. —/ps- 
wich Chronicle. 
Here is one—Manchester! You 
can’t beat Manchester when it comes to 
hustling off the snow and clearing it 
away. 
The marriage of Ashley R. Porter of 
Cambridge and Miss Emma A. West of 
Magnolia is to take place shortly. 
There are people who cultivate a su- 
pernaturally wise look for the purpose of 
covering up their inward foolishness. 
The man who makes a fool of him- 
self has no one but himself to blame if 
he doesn’t do a good job. 
