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NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1910. 
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1 « Society Notes 4 ¢ 
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Herbert W. Mason and _ family 
have leased the J. Randolph Coo- 
hidge, jr., cottage at Lobster Cove, 
Manchester, for the summer, and 
will move down the middle of next 
~ month. 
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_ chester, for the season. 
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——\— 
M. C. Magill, the well-known silk 
manufacturer of New York city, has 
leased the house on the Kimball es- 
tate, Manchester, nearest the Hpis- 
copal church. ; 
Charles T. Dukelow of Boston has 
leased Wyndhurst,. corner of Mas- 
-conomo and Proctor streets, Man- 
He is ex- 
pected to occupy it about May 9. 
Mr. Dukelow is connected with’ the 
Boston Commercial. 
Se ge See 
Edw. C. Richardson and family 
will move to their Magnolia estate 
the last of next week, from their 
town house at 9 Bay State road, 
Boston. 
; ae Ee .: 
Otis I. Luke and family who spent 
the greater part of the winter at the 
Somerset, Boston, have moved to 
Beverly Farms for the summer and 
will live at the Gables cottage, which 
was occupied last year by the Edw. 
Blairs of Chicago. The Blairs will 
20 abroad for this season. 
Samuel B. Dana is among the 
early cottage arrivals at Beverly 
‘Farms. He is again oeceupying the 
Knowlton cottage on West. street, 
arriving yesterday. 
_ ——K— 
24 rikee 
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Stanton, 
who now spend the greater portion 
_of the summer at their country home 
in Millis, Cape Cod, instead of com- 
ing to Magnolia, plan to sail the 
early part of July for a ten weeks’ 
trip to Europe. Their son, Faulk- 
ner, will spend the summer at Mag- 
 nolia, with his grandmother, Mrs. 
Charles Hayden. 
Mrs. Hayden and 
her sister, Miss Fannie Faulkner, 
sailed for Europe several weeks ago. 
They expect to return early in July 
and will come at onee to their Mag- 
nolia estate. 
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Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. MeKee 
arrived this week at their summer 
home, at Beverly Farms. 
—_x-—- 
J. 8. Curtis and family have been 
among this week’s summer resi- 
dents to return to the Farms for the 
season, 
Ne 
Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Knowles and 
the latter’s mother, Mrs. John R. 
MeGinley and two unmarried daugh- 
ters, motored to the North Shore 
Sunday and stopped at the Hssex 
County club for lunch. 
——-\-—- 
The marriage of Miss Alice So-: 
hier to Herbert Bramwell Shaw at 
Trinity church, Boston, Saturday, 
at noon, will be the most prominent 
event of the week socially in Boston. 
Miss Sohier is the youngest daugh- 
ter of Mr. and Mrs. William D. So- 
hier of Beverly Cove colony and Mr. 
Shaw is a son of Mr. and Mrs. 8. 
Parkman Shaw. Miss Eleanor So- 
hier, a sister, will be maid of honor 
and the bridesmaids will be Miss 
Cornelia Woleott and Miss ‘Con- 
stance Bullard. S. Parkman Shaw, 
jr, will be best man. The ushers 
will be William D. Sohier, jr., Wil- 
liam Deford Beal and Arthur H. 
Shaw of Boston; Harold Arrow- 
smith of Newport, and Chester Bur- 
den, William Bramwell, Maleolm 
Sloane, Amos Sehermerhorn, Wil- 
liam Kernochan and John Kean, 
2nd, of New York. 
—--N-— 
Miss Mary Katherine Letterman, 
a clerk in the Diplomatic Bureau of 
the State Department was appointed 
April 18, private secretary to Mrs. 
Taft. Miss Letterman is a native of 
Pennsylvania, and was educated in 
Franee. 
—_x— 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Alexan- 
der have given over their New York 
residence at 4 W. 58th street, for the 
reception to follow .the wedding 
of Miss Eleanor Butler Alexander 
and Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., on 
June 20. The ceremony will be per- 
formed in the Fifth Avenue Presby- 
terian church, 
CSSSSESE SSS SSE ZIESS Ace dgi tt 
It is reported the German embassy 
will be at Manchester this year in- 
stead of at Beverly Farms as it has 
been for the last two or three years. 
—_x—- 
Dr. R. H. Fitz and family are ex- 
pected at The Mountain, their. sum- 
mer home, at West Manchester, to- 
morrow, for the season. 
—_x— 
Mrs. Edgar J. Bliss is occupying 
her Beverly Farms cottage, “*The 
House on the Rock,’’ off Hale 
street. 
—_x— 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hopkinson 
and family have opened their cot- 
tage at Manchester Cove for the sea- 
They arrived Wednesday. 
—-N-— 
Boston society has devoted much 
attention the past week to the an- 
nual show of the Vincent elub, 
which has given three performances 
in Jordan hall, besides the dress re- 
hearsal on Tuesday afternoon. The 
name of the play is ‘‘Rouge et 
Noir,’’? which was written by Mrs. 
Thaddeus Defriez, 2d (Grace Croll). 
—_x— 
The Dudley lL. Pickmans are 
spending the spring months at their 
country place in Bedford. Later 
they will come to their summer 
home at Beverly Cove, which is al- 
ready being put in readiness for 
them. Last year they spent the sum- 
mer touring Europe, having leased 
their estate on the North Shore to 
Mrs. L. Z. Leiter. 
—xXN— 
Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Rantoul 
and infant son left Boston last Fri- 
day for New York, sailing for Eng- 
land on Saturday, where Mrs. Ran- 
toul has many friends and relatives. 
They will spend the season in Lon- 
don and will afterwards travel 
through different parts of England. 
Mr. and Mrs. Rantoul have planned 
to be away six months. 
——Xx— 
The nuptials of Miss Barbara Hig- 
ginson of Boston and Pride’s Cross- 
ing, and Barrett Wendell, jr., are 
under arrangement for a date in 
June, at Pride’s, 
son. 
