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Mr. and Mrs. S. V. R. Crosby and 
two children came down to their 
summer residence at West Manches- 
ter to remain over the Easter hohl- 
days. -— 
—_x— 
Mrs. S. Parkman Blake and 
daughter, Miss Marion Blake, who 
are in California for the winter, will 
“not return until May, when they 
will come to their cottage at West 
- Manchester. 
a7 —x— 
{ Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Fabyan 
of 146 Commonwealth ave., Boston, 
and West Manchester, and their 
family, Miss Eleanor and Miss Edith 
- Fabyan, Masters George, Everett 
at their 
of the Easter holidays 
2 bungalow, at Buzzards bay. 
bh § —x— 
The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. 
_ Preston Gibson has been given the 
name of his distinguished grand- 
father, the late Senator James Mc- 
Millan. 
F 
= —xX— 
- Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Rantoul 
‘of the Beverly Farms colony and 
their infant son are booxed to sail 
~ for England, the latter part of April, 
where they have planned to spend 
six months visiting Mrs. Rantoul’s 
family and friends. Mrs. Rantoul, 
~ who was Miss Matilda C. P. Talbot, 
before her marriage, was a daugh- 
ter of the late Hon. Charles A. P. 
Talbot, formerly British consul gen- 
eral in Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Ran- 
toul will be in London, part of this 
‘summer, for the social season and 
will also visit other parts of Eng- 
land, where the latter formerly lived. 
—_x— 
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Caner of 
Philadelphia and Manchester, ac- 
companied by Miss Colket, are at 
_ Atlantic City for the Hastcr [lorse 
Show and were among those noted 
4 in the Palm Beach Sunday parade 
on the boardwalk. 
—_x— 
Mrs. Levi Z. Leiter is planning to 
sail for Europe in June to remain 
until September. Upon her return 
she will go to Beverly Farms, when 
it is expected her new villa will be 
ready for occupancy. 
and Wright Fabyan, will spend part . 
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Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Cotting and 
Mrs. Cotting’s sister, Mrs. H. G. O. 
Colby, motored down to West Man- 
chester last Sunday in the former’s 
new 1910 Packard. 
—_—x—. 
The Count and Countess Wedel of 
the German embassy, who occupied 
a cottage at Beverly Farms, last sea- 
son, ‘sailed this week for Germany, 
where the Countess will spend the 
summer. Count Wedel, who is coun- 
selor of the embassy, returns in June 
to act as charge d’affaires for the 
German ambassador who goes 
abroad in June. 
—_—x— 
Mrs. George Von L. Meyer, wife 
of the secretary of the navy, receiv- 
ed at the reception given by the offi- 
cers of the U. 8. S. Dolphin at the 
Washington Navy Yard, March 21, 
to say farewell to Lieut. Command- 
er B. F. Johnston, U. S. N., late 
chief officer, now assigned to duty 
at the training station at Newport. 
It will be recalled that the Dolphin 
spent the past season in North Shore 
waters, principally Gloucester har- 
bor, and Lieut. Johnston and fam- 
ily and his asociate officers and their 
families summered at Eastern Point 
and Bass Rocks. The Dolphin band 
gave several concerts in the yard 
of the postoffice, Gloucester, during 
last summer. The officers of the Dol- 
phin are prominent in the social life 
of the capital. 
—x— 
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Brand of 
Worcester have issued cards an- 
nouneing the marriage of their 
daughter, Rosaline Morton, and Cap- 
tain Archibald Henry Sunderland of 
the Coast Artillery, U. S. A., on 
Tuesday, April 5, at All Saints’ 
church, Worcester, with a reception 
at the bride-elect’s home, 36 Cedar 
street, at 12.30 o’clock. Mr. and 
Mrs. Brand are summer residents of 
the North Shore at Rocky Neck, 
Jast Gloucester, of long standing 
and are prominent in the social and 
musical life of Hotel Rockaway. The 
future home of Capt. Sunderland 
and his young bride-elect will be on 
the Pacific coast at Fort Ward, 
Washington, where they are at home 
after June 15. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1910. 
& EEE ECE EEE EEE S32332332 39335. 
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John R. McGinley of Pittsburg, 
who until last season summered at 
Manchester with his family, is said 
to have taken a 15 years’ lease of 
the former Barwick estate on Quar- 
ry Point, Eastern Point, East Glou- 
cester, which they occupied a por- 
tion of last summer. A stable and 
garage is being erected for them. 
ies 
Mrs. Quincy Shaw, jr., and son, 
on their return from Palm Beach 
stopped in Philadelphia to pay a vis- 
it to Mrs. Shaw’s father, Henry Pem- 
berton, of 1947 Locust avenue. 
—_—_x— 
Mrs. Lambier, formerly Mrs. 
Natalie Schenek Collins of New 
York and Newport, is at Atlantic 
City, and North North Shore society, 
especially in Boston, is much inter- 
ested just now in the suit against 
her former husband, Capt. Glen Col- 
lins, brought by Mrs. Ellen Balch- 
Ryder of Brookline to recover $25,- 
000 of securities. Mrs. Ryder is a 
member of an old Gloucester family, 
a niece of Hon. and Mrs. W. W. 
French, and a grand-daughter of 
Mrs. Ellen F. Shaw of Gloucester, 
who devoted so much time and 
money in reclaiming the old Revolu- 
tionary house on Middle street, 
Gloucester, and placed her valuable 
collection of antiques in it, an ac- 
cumulation of over 40 years, and it 
is the Mecca of numerous summer 
residents of the North Shore, who 
love the traditional and antique. 
pay ae 
Dr. Wharton Sinkler, who died re- 
cently in Philadelphia, was a broth- 
er of Miss Caroline Sinkler, who has 
a handsome estate at Eastern Point, 
East Gloucester. Dr. Sinkler was a 
famous neurologist and specialist, 
vice president of the College of 
Physicians and a trustee of the Uni- 
versity of Pennsylvania. Dr. Sink- 
ler came from one of the oldest 
Quaker City families and was widely 
known in his profession. His sister, 
Mrs. Charles B. Coxe, is a sister-in- 
law of Eckley Coxe, whose fund for 
archaelogical research for the Uni- 
versity of Pennsylvania at has re- 
sulted recently in unearthing by Dr. 
Hilprecht, at Babylon, a tablet re- 
counting the story of the deluge. 
