3 
= 
—ardsville, N. J., in the Episocpal church and was followed 
- by a reception at the Turnbull summer home. 
- Roland Cotton Smith of Washington, D. C., an uncle. 
“Oct, 13, 1916. 
a 
F much interest to the Ipswich colony was the recent 
“ wedding of Miss Katherine Benedict Turnbull, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ramsay Turnbull of New 
- York, to Chalmers Wood, Jr., of New York and “Apple- 
ton Farms,” Ipswich. The wedding took place at Bern- 
te 
The Rev. 
of the groom; the Rey. William L. Wood, of Lenox, a 
brother of the groom, and the Rev. T. A. Conover, rector 
of the church, performed the ceremony. 
_ Asa part of the wedding festivities the weekly hunt 
of the Essex fox hounds began and ended at the home of 
the Turnbulls. Mr. Wood and his bride will pass their 
honeymoon in the west. They will make their home in 
Bernardsville. 
The bride was much entertained the past summer 
when she spent some time in Ipswich at the home of her 
fiance. 
3% . 
Mrs. Henry B. Sawyer, who spent the past season 
at Hospital Point, Beverly, has returned to her winter 
home, 26 Edgehill road, Brookline. 
° ee ° 
Mrs. John Hays Hammond of Gloucester, president 
of the Women’s American Supply League, will direct 
the preparations for a fashion carnival, given for the bene- 
fit of infantile paralysis sufferers, in the ballroom of the 
Ritz-Carlton, New York, on the evenings of Oct. 30 and 
31. She will be assisted by members of the league’s ex- 
ecutive council, among whom are prominent New York 
women, including Miss Helen Frick of Pride’s Crossing. 
Oo O 
Mr. and Mrs. Reginald deKoven of New York, who 
spent the summer in North Beverly, have been touring 
the White mountains before returning to New York. 
Oo % 
Mr. and Mrs. Augustus P. Loring, Jr., will pass the 
winter at Pride’s Crossing. 
Harold L. eee ais is to marry Miss Eliza- 
beth Burrage, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Bur- 
rage, on November 10, has leased the house at No. 269 
Beacon st., Boston, which the Rev. and Mrs. George A. 
Strong have occupied several years. The Chalifoux fam- 
ily and the Burrage family were of the Manchester colony 
the past summer, where they occupied cottages on Smith’s 
Point. 
o 8 9 
James Routledge, who has been summering on the 
North Shore at Rockport, has left for his winter home 
at San Antonio, Texas. 
ORO: 
Mrs. John B. Drake of Chicago closed her summer 
at Bass Rocks by taking a motor party to Quebec. In 
the party were her son, John B. Jr., a niece, Miss Dorothy 
Eastman, Mr. Drake’s sister, Mrs. Henry W. Farnum of 
“Sun Dial,” Magnolia, and Mrs. Mitchell Sheriff. 
bd .o7 4 
Miss Eleonora Sears will play in the fifth annual 
lawn tennis tournament of the Hot Springs Lawn Tennis 
club, which begins Oct. 16. 
Marblehead was the summer abode of Mr. and Mrs. 
Maurice L. Rothschild of Chicago. They were joined 
recently by Mr. and Mrs. Edward Morris and Miss Ruth 
Morris of Chicago on a two weeks’ auto trip before leav- 
ing for their home. Bee 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Munn, Jr., and the Gurnee 
Munns have spent several weeks in the White Mountains 
since leaving Manchester. They have since returned to 
Philadelphia where they were- actively interested in the 
Bryn Mawr horse show. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 7 
The Siamese Legation took its departure from Bass 
Rocks Tuesday of last week. The English secretary, 
Edward H. Loftus, and family, departed on Monday for, 
Washington, with the exception of Mrs. Loftus, who 
sailed recently for England for a two months’ stay. 
; 2 
The Baroness Huard of France, who recently spoke 
before a large audience of North Shore summer residents 
at the Hammond estate, Fresh Water Cove, Gloucester, 
has been a guest at the Sleeper cottage, Eastern Point, 
Gloucester. 
oOo 2 O 
Mrs. W. Harry Brown has closed her summer home 
at Beverly Cove and returned to Pittsburg for the winter. 
“Nobody likes Dobson.” 
“Oh, yes, somebody does.” 
“Who oh 
“Dobson.” 
O, suns and skies and clouds of June, 
And clouds of June together, 
Ye cannot rival for one hour 
October's bright blue weather. 
2K 2K XK *K ok K *K 
O, suns and skies and flowers of June, 
Count all your boasts together, 
Love, loveth best of all the year 
October's bright blue weather. 
OT many weddings are scheduled for October in North 
Shore society. 
Oct. 14 has been chosen for the wedding of Miss 
Anne Middleton Means, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur 
Little of Beverly Farms, to Valentine Worthington, son 
of Mrs. M. G. Worthington of New York. 
On Oct. 14 Miss Caroline W. Foster, daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. W. Foster of Marblehead Neck, and 
Theodore Sizer of New York, will be married at the 
First Parish church in Dover, N. H. 
The wedding of Miss Rosamond Gibson, daughter of 
_ Mrs. Charles Hammond Gibson of Nahant and Boston, 
to Charles Gibson Winslow, son of Mrs. George Scott 
Winslow of Boston, will be an October event. 
o 8.0 
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Martin (Elizabeth Bigelow) have 
returned to their residence; No. 1000 Cathedral street, 
Baltimore, from a visit with Mrs. Martin’s parents, Mr. 
and Mrs. Prescott Bigelow, at Manchester. 
cAd 
o 8% O 
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Agassiz Shaw, who have spent 
two years at East Mountain, Peterboro, N. H., will be at 
their place at Beevrly Farms again for the coming winter, 
Their home was occupied by the Marshall Fabyans the 
past summer. 
o 8 9 
Mr. and Mrs. Ezra C. Fitch have closed “River- 
house” at Norton’s Neck, West Manchester, and are 
spending some time at White Sulphur Springs, Va., be- 
fore opening their town house. 
The Young Lady (going on a visit across seas, to 
nervous aunt)—We’re all right, Auntie. Don’t) you 
worry about us. The voyage is soon over. Besides, | 
expect we shall have destroyers to look after us. 
I’m sure it’s worth 
Sketch 3 
Auntie—That’s right. Do, dear. 
it, even if you do have to pay a little extra! 
Protection is the shibboleth of the Republicans this 
year, as it has been throughout all the years of the history 
of the Republican party —E-change. 
