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ORTH SHORE BREEZE 
_ Vol. XIV \ Manchester, Mass., Friday, October 20, 1916 
No. 42 
SOCIETY NOTES 
N ENGAGEMENT and autumn wedding hitherto unan- 
nounced, of much interest to North Shore folk, is that 
of Miss Edith Deacon of Boston and New York, and 
Judge H. G. Gray of New York. November roth has 
been set as the date of the wedding and the honeymoon 
will be a six-weeks’ trip to Europe. Judge Gray makes 
his home in the Knickerbocker club, New York. 
Oo 8 
The J. H. Lancashires are closing their summer home 
in Manchester this week and are moving to New York 
City for the winter, where they have leased the Seth 
Thomas residence on Fifth ave., at 88th st. Dr. Lan- 
cashire and son, Ammi W. Lancashire have closed their 
office on State st., Boston, and have open a New York 
office in the Singer Building.. Miss Lila Lancashire has 
been in Virginia visiting one of her school friends, but she 
will come. to Manchester next week, previous to joining 
her parents in New REE 
: ; 3 
It is reported that Albert C. Burrage has bought the 
Saltonstall property at Pride’s Crossing for a summer 
home and also the famous Spaulding gardens at Beverly 
Farms. The past summer ‘they have been in the 5. Parker 
Bremer house on Smith’s Point, Manchester, which has 
recently been sold to the John R. McGinleys of Pittsburg. 
The Saltonstall property adjoins Mingo Beach on its 
easterly end, and is opposite the estate of Herbert M. 
Sears. The John W. Blodgetts have occupied it the last 
two or three seasons, irs 
POs : 
Harold L. Chalifoux of Manchester gave a dinner- 
dance last Friday at the Lowell Country club in honor of 
the bridal party of Miss Eugenie Meigs and Tom Clark, 
whose wedding took place last Saturday in Lowell. Miss 
Elizabeth Burrage, the fiancee of Mr. Chalifoux, was 
among the guests. The Meigs family spent the summer 
at Bass Rocks where they have been going for several 
seasons. 2 
o 8 9 
Mrs. John E. Lancaster, who passed the summer at 
the Lee house, Magnolia, has returned to - Worcester. 
Miss Rosamond Lancaster is visiting Miss Warburton in 
Philadelphia. The latter was the guest of Miss Lan- 
caster several weeks this summer and they were both 
roauch entertained by friends on the Shore. Mrs. Lan- 
caster will later join her daughter in New York, where 
they will spend several are a Christmas. 
3% 
Philadelphia will furnish one of. the most interesting 
of the fall weddings, when, on November 14, Miss 
Uytendale Baird, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William J. 
Baird, will be married to Harrison K. Caner, Jr., son of 
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison K. Caner. Both are prominent 
Philadelphia families, and the Caners have had _ their 
summer home in Manchester for years in a sightly cot- 
tage on Dana’s Beach. The engagement was announced 
last. April, following the winter season during which Miss 
Baird was one of the most feted buds of the season. 
This only daughter was presented at a dansant at the 
Bellevue-Stratford last December by her grandmother, 
Mrs. Matthew Baird. She spent part of August on the 
North Shore visiting in the Caner home and was joined 
later by her mother for a brief stay in Magnolia. She 
is now starting on her second season out with many en- 
tertainments in honor of her approaching marriage. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
NORMAN PRINCE is dead.. The daring American 
aviator whose name has become a byword for heroic 
bravery passed away at a little French field hospital some- 
where on the front last week. News of his death reached 
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Prince, at their 
East Wenham home last Sunday, following close after 
the message telling of his injuries received last week in 
a wid-air engagement when his machine was brought 
down riddled with bullets and both of his legs were 
fractured. 
Norman Prince was a graduate of Harvard and 
Harvard Law school. The North Shore has felt a per- 
sonal interest in his achievements upon the field of battle, 
for it was in Hamilton that he made his first flight ten 
years ago. Shortly after his graduation from law, school 
he received his license as an aviator. In March, 1915, 
he went to London where he first flew with the Royal 
Flying Corps. Later in France he came into prominence 
by his daring escapades. His brave exploits became the 
talk of two continents and when he returned last Christ- 
mas to this country he had won his war medals and sev- 
eral official citations: He had received the Croix de 
Guerre and the Medaille Militaire. His last decoration 
of honor was received the week of his death. 
+3 
The Albert Ivins Crolls have closed their house on 
Smith’s Point, Manchester, this week, after a long season, 
and have returned to their town residence, 324 Beacon 
st., Boston. ; 
o 8 O 
Mrs. John Hays Hammond, president of the Wo- 
man’s American Supply League, and Mrs. Yamei Kin, of 
China, will tell something about their work at the meeting 
of the Woman’s Forum at the Biltmore Hotel, New York, 
this Friday morning. : 
o 8 0 
Mrs. William F. Draper, her daughter, Miss Mar- 
garet Preston Draper, and the latter’s fiancé, Prince 
Andrea Boncompagni-Ludovici, of Rome, left Washing- 
ton last week for New York, where they spent most of 
the week selecting Miss Draper’s trousseau. While under 
instruction, Miss Draper has not entered the Roman 
Catholic Church, to which her fiancé belongs, and on ac- 
count of the difference in religion there will be a house 
wedding in the Draper home in Washington, at which 
Cardinal Gibbons will officiate. It will occur next Wed- 
nesday, Oct. 25. 
% 
Mrs. Andrew Peters has returned to Washington 
from a visit with her mother, Mrs. John C. Phillips at 
North Beverly, and with her sister, Mrs. Raynal Bolling, 
at»Rye,; N.Y: 
o 2 9 
Chicago has an engagement of interest to the East 
Gloucester colony where Miss Elizabeth (“Bobsy”) 
Fuller has visited each summer for several years. She 
is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Gordon Fuller 
of Chicago. In Gloucester she has spent part of the 
summers at the Arthur G. Leonard home on Eastern 
Point, the guest of the Misses Leonard, and has been 
very popular in the ‘society of the Point. Miss Fuller 
came out two winters ago and has enjoyed great popu- 
larity. She is a Junior Leaguer and was the “leading 
lady” in the society movie play of last spring.’ She is 
to marry Charles Barnett Goodspeed, son of Mrs. W. F, 
Goodspeed of the Blackstone hotel. 
