10 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT 
THE 
MAGNOLIA TEA HOUSE 
Formerly The Dolphin 
Will open for the Season on or about June 15 
A specialty will be made of catering to Afternoon 
Teas, Whist and Bridge Parties, also Dinner Parties. 
Pleasing Rooms 
Superior Guisine 
Mrs. Ella A. Rolfe 
School of Domestic Science, Brookline 
Society Hotes 
N. S. Bartlett and family will move 
down to their Smith’s Point estate next 
Thursday. 
Mr. and Mrs. Bryce J. Allan arrived 
at their villa at Beverly Cove last Satur- 
day for the season. 
Dr. and Mrs. Franklin Dexter moved 
down to their summer estate at Beverly 
Farms a few days ago. 
Dr. Henry F. Sears was among the 
week’s arrivals at Beverly Cove. His 
cottage was opened Tuesday. 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Heaton 
have moved down from Boston to their 
Beverly Farms residence the past week. 
Mr. and Mrs. L. Cartaret Fenno and 
their four children are to spend May at 
their country place in Pomfret, Conn., 
after which they will probably come to 
their Beverly Farms estate. 
In the handicap list of the Mass. Golf 
association, 2300 names, we note that 
of the eight players with a handicap of 
three, three are members of the Essex 
County clubh—A. Carnegie, 2d, James 
H. Childs and Thayer McMillan. Of 
those with a handicap of four are Geo. 
H. ‘Crocker, J. F. Curtis, Q: A: Shaw, 
jr., I. G. Stevenson, G. F. Willett, G. 
McC. Sargent, G. Owen Winston and 
Deel Lana: 
Diamonds 
Watches 
Clocks 
Silverware 
160 Cabot Street, 
The Edward C. Richardsons are 
closing their Boston house early next 
week, when they move down to their 
Magnolia place for the summer. 
Mrs. Gordon Prince moved down to 
her estate at West Manchester a few 
days ago to remain until late June, when 
Mrs. George Fabyan will occupy the 
cottage for the summer. 
Mts. Daniel Ahl and son Leonard 
Ahl sailed from New York last week on 
the Adriatic for a few months’ stay. 
Mrs. Ahl and son had passage engaged 
to sail on their return to Boston from the 
south in March, but were detained be- 
cause of Mr. Ahl’s illness. He has just 
recovered from a fever. 
One of the new attractions at the 
Magnolia Tea House this year, which, 
by the way, is the name Mrs. Rolfe has 
given in place of The Dolphin, —will be 
a gift shop. Mrs. Rolfe, who is to con- 
duct the Tea House, is well known 
among the North Shore cottagers, as the 
most successful head of the School of 
Domestic Science, Brookline. Many 
North Shore matrons and young women 
are numbered among her pupils there. 
A wedding of interest to North Shore 
society was that of Miss Marion Burdett, 
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everett 
Burdett of Boston, and Prescott Bigelow, 
jr., of Boston and Manchester. The 
ceremony was performed at 4 o'clock 
Brooches 
Chains, Fobs 
Cut Glass 
Toilet Sets 
& & a 
_sister of the groom. 
‘Thursday afternoon by Rev. Dr. Alex- 
ander Mann. David Nevins Bigelow, 
at present in business in the west, came ~ 
on to be his brother’s best man, and Miss 
Florence Rawn of Chicago, his fiancee; 
and whose own wedding isto be in June, 
was a bridesmaid. ‘The other brides- 
maids were Misses Marion Sortwell of 
Cambridge, Leslie Lindsey, Grace Kel- | 
len and Elizabeth Bigelow, the young 
Miss Mary Red- 
field of Philadelphia was maid of honor, 
and the ushers were Paul Burdett, Geo. 
G. Ball, John Lowell, jr., Lawrence 
P. Dodge of Newburyport, Francis W. 
Kemble of Philadelphia, Wheelock 
Bigelow of Morristown, N. J., Craw- 
ford Burton of New York, Hayden 
Channing of Brookline, Bradlee Van 
Brunt of Milton and Harold F. McNeil 
- of Brookline, all Harvard ’08. 
Mrs. William E. Page, so well known 
-in Boston and vicinity asa teacher of 
bridge and the new game—skat—is to be 
on the North Shore again-this season. 
Last season, it will be remembered, Mrs. 
Page wasat the North Shore Grill, where 
she conducted some very — successful 
classes. This season she will be at the 
Magnolia Tea House, where she will 
teach in the very attractive dining room 
in the rear of the Tea House,—an ex- 
cellent place for afternoon and_ practice 
classes. - 
WEDDING JEWELRY _ cos 
We note a few items. You do the choosing, 
KKodaks 
Opera Glasses 
Fountain Pens 
Bric-a-brac 
JOHN B. HILL & SON, JEWELERS 
_ Beverly, Mass. 
